As I mentioned, it kind of goes back to the initial answer. We've looked at the information that was available. We have to remember that the information in the recovery act is the number of U.S. dollars being put into the stimulus bill. So that doesn't tell us what contracts Canadian companies would have received or would be able to obtain. That just tells us this is the amount the U.S. is putting in its economy for the stimulus project.
You remember the act has a number of other projects, social spending to tax credits, etc., so you have to look at infrastructure amounts. That, combined with the fact that Canadian suppliers are often second-, third-, fourth-level suppliers rather than prime contractors, makes it very difficult.
Beyond the figures, though, there's also the broader economic relationship between the two countries. Over the years, a number of value chains have been created, which work in tandem on both sides of the border, so the measures were impacting those value chains and our companies and our provinces were coming forward saying there is an impact and we want to re-establish open markets.
That all went into the analysis we did before we started the negotiations.