I appreciate your comments in that regard. We want transparency by way of our transfers to those governments. Certainly, I always wanted that to be the case when we were looking at health transfers to ensure that we were held accountable as to where some of that spending would occur, and sometimes that doesn't necessarily happen. When you look at the Province of Ontario having a cap and trade system exempt from the carbon pricing and enabling another $1.2 billion or $1.5 billion in revenues, which was eliminated, that seems a little careless and a political decision.
The other question I want to get to, because I know we're out of time, is with regard to Alberta. You're big into the pension plans, and we've had a lot of debates, you and I, over the past years. They were very fruitful for me, because they were very enlightening. When Ontario was looking forward to putting the Ontario pension plan as an add-on to the CPP, we were able to initiate that and leverage the enhancement of the CPP, which I think was better for all of Canada, not just looking only at Ontario.
What is your take on Alberta putting at risk, if you see it as such—