No. We've seen, as was mentioned, $100 million from the Quebec government, which was just for steel and aluminum. I don't know what the dollar amount would actually be. It would be very large though, if you look Canada-wide and at the direct impacts that are going to come out of this. It's great to say we'll support companies and their employees through work sharing and stuff like that. I'm more worried that the companies won't be there in a couple of months and there will be no employees to support through work sharing.
There could be some significant short-term pain. The issue is the ripple effect. Let's just take an auto parts supplier, for example. If an auto parts supplier is running on 5% margins, and all of a sudden their parts coming back in are 10% more expensive, they're now in the hole 5% on everything they're making in Canada. How long will they be able to operate? How much money do they have in the bank to be able to withstand that?
Then one of the ripple effects is that if one auto parts supplier goes down, what about the next one down the line? There is always a next one, so I'd be looking really closely at the tier two and tier three suppliers, the smaller parts suppliers in the industry and what their health status is like. The larger ones tend to have a bit more flexibility in pricing and have a bit more weight to push back to their customers on, but the smaller guys don't have that flexibility and will be trying to absorb it, and frankly won't be able to absorb it for very long.
Then we don't have to worry about work sharing and the rest of it because they just won't be in business to even worry about. That's the part I would look at immediately, and that pain will start happening over the summer.