It's a good question, and to be honest we don't have a precise answer.
I actually wanted to make this comment in response to several other comments I had heard today. I think someone had made this comment earlier. The vast majority of municipal procurement in Canada is actually open, just like the vast majority of procurement in the United States and at the state level has been open.
I know that among many of our members who are really trying to represent the interests of their constituents, their position on Buy American is, look, the situation before Buy American was not ideal, there was not open and complete access to the United States market, nor was there open and complete access to the Canadian market, but at least let's roll back the clock to 2007-2008.
As I said, I don't think our judgment is complete here, because all the information isn't in, but our analysis thus far is that this agreement helps to roll back the clock. It helps to stop the precedent that Buy American was going to set to encourage similar sorts of procurement practices to spread amongs United States municipalities, just like it could actually spread to Canadian municipalities.
To answer your question, there are high-profile examples of Canadian municipalities that, for some very good reasons, were exempting certain procurement projects from U.S. competition, just the same as their counterparts were doing in the United States.
Really, our position is that the clock be rolled back. It won't be perfect, though, if we do that.