When it comes to infrastructure stimulus funds, the government has decided to ask for project progress data. How much money has been spent? What is the starting date? What is the end date? Have tenders been done? We covered that before.
The reason we did not ask for specific job information was that at the time, the reliability of the data was in question. I wasn't there, but these folks all were there, and they can explain it to you in further detail. When you collect information over many, many thousands of projects, through the proponents... It's the same problem the U.S. is having right now--i.e., that $980 worth of boots are creating nine jobs and so on. The reporting becomes inaccurate. The proponents sometimes give, I guess, exaggerated numbers or incomplete numbers. Comparisons between part-time, short-term, and long-term data become a problem. If a carpenter works, for example, on one bridge project and goes and works on something else, how do you account for those two things?
So there was a decision made that we wouldn't collect that kind of data, because of the reliability.