Thank you very much for your question.
With regard to procurement, when they develop a procurement threshold, we've asked that its levels be sufficient so that we will not be burdened with additional costs on items we would get through normal procurement, and without having to go through some sort of international screening to make it happen. We're asking that the threshold be substantial enough to allow us to do business as normal. I don't think anybody's going to come and try to take over a particular project that's worth a few hundred thousand dollars. The overall threshold on capital was around eight and a half million dollars, which is part of what we'd discussed and negotiated under the Buy American policy, and we've been talking about that being a critical component in the negotiation.
With regard to jobs and regulation, we have asked very clearly that we not be forced to lose the ability to govern at the municipal level. It's incumbent upon the province and the federal government to make sure those rights are enshrined within the agreement so that we will not be in a position of losing our authority as an entity of government within Canada.
As far as jobs and impact on what's going on are concerned, until the final agreement is actually dealt with, it would be premature of me to guess whether this would be a positive or a negative. On that, we know that trade is important to Canada, and our position has always been in favour of free and fair trade.
With regard to the regulatory side--