Yes, very briefly. I don't want to take up too much time since there are two of us here answering this one question.
Specifically on the issue of balancing trade, when all of this stimulus funding from the United States has come and gone and has dried up, at the end of the day the United States will have a very progressive and very well-established procurement policy on transit vehicles, let's say. So for Canadian companies—and there are many of them—that decide they're going to put in a bid for any of these contracts down the line, nothing is going to stop the United States from having them exercise that policy.
Conversely, if we were to tender a project on transit, this now, under the WTO, would be opened up for free bidding from anybody, including the United States, whereas, you know, a similar policy doesn't exist here. This is just one example of how there's an imbalance in terms of the existing procurement policies.