Well, that's because of the way it was passed through, because of the increase in the way the benefit is structured. The people who received most of the benefit were people who had incomes at the edge of the first income tax bracket, so you're right. In fact it was something that I was very critical of at the time, that there was no increase to people below $20,000, and most of the increase, which was still needed, went to people more in the $20,000 to $40,000 income category. So you're quite right, and that's the reason why I think the base benefit needs to be adjusted for everyone. But it's because of the way the particular adjustment was done.
I will say, in terms of the federal stimulus dollars, one area where there were some additional dollars provided this year in the federal budget was to affordable housing. I believe the number was $59 million to the Province of Alberta, and the unfortunate thing there was that the provincial government withdrew dollars. They withdrew more than a dollar for every additional federal dollar that was put into additional funding for affordable housing, and in my view that was extremely unfortunate and counterproductive.
The other area where there was some benefit in this year's budget—I didn't address it—was the working income tax benefit, which basically is a wage supplementation initiative for low-wage workers. That benefit was, I think, almost doubled in the recent budget. So the federal government has done some good things, and I just hope—