Thank you for the question, Mr. Fergus.
Our mayor's approach is based on equity. That is a very important principle in this process.
Fairness has to be underpinning all of this. Yes, for each action there is a reaction. When you call for changes, it raises the very real possibility, if not certainty, that they will affect other ridings. What am I to do, and what is the mayor to do, when a community that has been together for decades will now be separated?
I emphasized this in the last answer: It's not personal. It should not be personal. This is about representing the interests of constituents—thousands of people—who have lived together in neighbourhoods for many years and were quite surprised by this proposal.
Again, I emphasize that in the initial proposal, the community of interest was completely intact. There was no community of interest broken in the first proposal raised, at least for the proposed London Centre.