I'm not sure that's entirely contingent just on TPP. Going forward and at least for the foreseeable future, that looks like the probable case, but it's based on a variety of competitiveness factors that I think the government and the industry are working hard to understand. They're shifting production around the globe to support new, emerging markets. The North American market has had a lot of attention over the last several decades, and we've industrialized to support it, and our OEMs have similarly done that.
As these other markets emerge, they need to have footprints in those markets, and that has also driven our global distribution of facilities. If you look at our footprint here specifically, because we're predominantly in Ontario, the footprints have changed and the numbers of facilities have reduced, but overall our employment numbers have stayed relatively the same, so our facilities have grown in size. We've continued to maintain growth in our sales.
So our footprint has changed. Whereas historically we would have a facility that might have 200 people, today we have some that are approaching 2,000 people.
It's very critically important to our business in Ontario that we at the very least maintain the manufacturing we have here today. We incentivize it to stay and we look for successive programs to backfill the ones that we're making.
I'm not in a position to be very hopeful that we're going to attract a new investment in the near future, simply because I don't think we need the additional capacity. I'm not sure this is the optimal position from which to support that growing global market demand.