I don't have answers to that, to be honest. What I can tell you is that the infrastructure bank is one of many tools that will be available to proponents to access innovative financing. At the end of the day, the bank will be there to look at trying to support those projects where we could actually bring private sector money to the table. So it's really trying to crowd in additional private sector money to try to address the infrastructure gap.
As I said in my remarks, there are some innovative tools that the bank will have access to, such as loan guarantees and loans, as well as equity investments. The important thing to note with the infrastructure bank is that, while it is part of the toolkit that communities will be able to access, it's not mandatory for provinces, territories, and municipalities. So they would have the choice to use the bank if it makes sense to them in terms of what they're trying to do.
Certainly if communities want to be involved in the infrastructure bank, there may be opportunities to provide some capacity building to them in order to access those particular tools.