I think if you look at the economy as a whole, there are sectors of the economy that are building back. I think when the government in the budget looked at when to wind down these support programs, there was some logic to doing it at the beginning of the summer, and then it was extended, because the government can't be in a position where it's making every sector of the economy whole again. This has just been too deep and devastating a pandemic for that to happen. But there are some sectors, like ours, that have suffered disproportionately as a result of this pandemic and that have not had one single opportunity to recover over these last 19 months. We're not out of it, because now we're in our off-season. Our recovery, we think, is going to start in the spring as we build towards the summer.
So there does need to be some consideration in government policy response for those hardest-hit sectors. You know, we were booming before the pandemic. In this industry we're not hurting because there's been some sort of a shift in human behaviour. If anything, travel is going to come back with a vengeance. We have so much demand on the books. People want to come back and get married every day of the week and have international conventions. The phones are ringing, but today we're not yet in a position to welcome people back to Canada. We want to have this sector alive on the other side of this, and that is precisely what this bill would do.