Actually, for the record, the Liberals haven't asked a single question on polling in the House. I didn't respond to you or any other Liberal on the issue of polling. In any event, the minister has dealt with that effectively and I won't belabour it.
My question is that Paul Dewar had a substantive question on the issue of the former JDS Uniphase campus, and maybe Tim can give us an update on that, because that's actually an important case study of an example of why the government isn't in the business of owning buildings and seeking out real estate opportunities to buy and reno and flip. We're not in that business, because it's a dangerous business.
There's the headline in the paper that said we could have had it for $30 million, or whatever, and now it's expanded into a few hundred million dollars. But that's not at all accurate, because if we had purchased it in the beginning, there would have had to be renovations and security, and there are all kinds of things with that.
One way of looking at a lease is the owner is taking on the obligation. When you lease a building, the taxpayers aren't on the hook if the federal government doesn't own the building. If you're leasing a building, the costs of the fix-ups of the building are absorbed by the owner and it's amortized over the life of the lease. Therefore, if the government had purchased the JDS Uniphase building, even at the original price before the Conservatives came into government, the immediate hit to taxpayers would have been tens of millions of dollars for the cost of a retrofit right off the top, rather than amortizing that cost. This is good business.
It's in Mr. Dewar's neck of the woods, and people here want to know about the status of the JDS building, so just go ahead and talk about that if you would.