Certainly.
In Canada we have three levels of government: the federal government, the provinces, and the individual cities. Individual investors will end up ultimately in a city somewhere. Often, they are originally identified by our trade commissioners, etc., overseas. We already have regular, twice yearly meetings between our municipalities and the federal government on how we can make that interaction between the federal government and our municipalities easier and better so, if we've identified a particular client and they have immigration questions, they can be resolved.
In the past each federal department has tended to view this separately, and you've had to set up relationships with each individual department. It is hoped that, when the hub comes into place, we will have one place where we can go to get that interaction with the federal government.
We fully expect that the organization will be listening to and responding to the individual municipalities. For the hub to be successful, it's going to have to place that investment into a municipality somewhere across Canada. The municipalities themselves have the in-depth knowledge, such as Blair has of the Ottawa ecosystem, of where that investment is going to be best placed and how they can best explain that.
I think that all the interaction we've had so far has been very positive.