Thank you for being here to give us some further insight into this issue. I appreciate it very much.
You've looked at a number of the options that were before the federal government dealing with the infrastructure debt with regard to federal government buildings. About two years ago, when Scott Brison was the Minister of Public Works, he put together an RFP, and actually put it out there, to sell 360 federal buildings. The way the RFP was written—it was a few hundred pages long—it was easily conceivable that every single one of those federal buildings could have been purchased in a trust, a large trust. So he put every single federal building up. We've obviously scaled it down with the rather modest proposal of nine very specifically chosen buildings, because we thought the approach of the Liberals was reckless.
What would the liability be to taxpayers of the Liberal plan of 360 federal buildings being all put into an RFP? That was one of the options that the government could have pursued. The Liberals pursued it; we chose not to. Tell us about that approach, and why that would be dodgy for taxpayers.