I guess my concern here is I'm looking back to 1982, the 25 years counting back from here. Take, for example, urban real estate prices in Toronto. You're not even looking at the same world any more.
So unless you put a figure, whatever that figure is, on where we're going to be to deal with the thousands of placements that we're going to need in those key urban areas for civil servants, there's a considerable booby prize sitting there at the end of this.
Would it not have been reasonable for someone who's trying to sell this to the taxpayer, to the government, to have put a fair price on what we're going to be looking at when we reach that 25-year period?