Within the 156,000 total jobs, which is not just construction but supporting the engineering and the supply chain, your 2,700 jobs you referenced would be in that. That project was included in the estimate when the Conference Board of Canada did it.
In the construction industry, a lot of that work in the transmission lines will be done by experienced contractors who work across the country and draw on a pool of resources from across the country.
There are issues from time to time. Even within the oil sands, you could see four or five years ago when too many projects were going above what the infrastructure could support. They got into competition with each other, and labour prices went up and they were making promises, whether it was bonuses or overtime, or what not.
The construction industry tries to manage it the best they can, but if the total demand is all up at the same time, the law of supply and demand, when it comes to construction, comes into play.