Thank you for the question.
We have seen over the last 10 years a wide variation in terms of budget tabling. We've seen something as early as January, in 2009, in response to the global economic crisis. As recently as 2015, we had a different problem in the energy market and a precipitous drop in energy prices, which had all kinds of impacts and implications for the government's ability to forecast and project requirements. We saw a budget on April 21 of that year.
So because we do not have a fixed budget date, because the government will want to avail itself of the flexibility to take advantage of the best available information in setting its economic forecasts, a tabling date of May 1 would encompass anything we've seen over the last 10 years, and it should provide the government with the ability to, at the very least, table the estimates after the budget so that we can reconcile to the budget.