Thank you.
To Mr. Atkinson, we hear your message loud and clear about long-term planning, but we live in a political world here. I've been a municipal councillor, which has a little more stability, technically. Federally and provincially, whether you're in a minority or a majority government, governments are short-lived, and plans are not....
Unless you lived in Ontario for a number of years, when we had a Conservative government for 40-some years or whatever it was, it's very difficult to plan long term. I understand the concept and I understand it would be great for us, but it's a very difficult piece.
My next question is really more of a comment. We got a “Building Canada Together” document just the week before. It's from Minister—who'd like to be premier, I think—Bob Chiarelli, a former municipal mayor. Part of that, a whole chapter, is on privatization and having the private sector involved.
The Province of Ontario says, as one of its recommendations, the following: “Promote the wider use of AFPs”—that's P3s at the provincial level—“across all federal infrastructure funding programs and jurisdictions when appropriate....” The message from the Province of Ontario—and I'm from Ontario—is that P3s do work.
Now, I would agree with you, and we've heard from every single witness, regardless of which office they're from, that P3s do not apply to every single project, but what would you say...?
You know, we're getting input from provinces, partners, that they want a national infrastructure project, and part of that funding mechanism is the private sector involvement. To me, it sounds as though they believe it's working, and I would like your opinion.
Mr. Sanger, I know you mentioned that you worked for the province as an economist. Under which government did you work? Would you have given them advice at the time to look at P3s?