I would say that a cottage is used fully on a seasonal basis, and Canadians enjoy coming to Ellicottville, New York, on a seasonal basis. I think that is a mutual benefit accruing to both countries. All communities along the northern border between Canada and the United States, which is 5,500 miles long, as you know, and has 120 land ports of entry.... There are going to be unique characteristics, and I think the unique characteristic of the situation that I'm concerned with, again, is mutually beneficial to the United States and Canada.
When I say that I spent my summers on the Canadian shores of Lake Erie, that's consistently virtually every summer from being a kid through to being an adult. My situation is not unique. That's a thing in Buffalo and western New York.
Our ability to attract low-cost air carriers to the Buffalo Niagara International Airport is owing in large part to the fact that 30% of the people using the Buffalo Niagara International Airport are Canadians. Canadians spend $15 million in health care in my community. Our retail economy is profoundly influenced, as well as higher education and cultural organizations. It's a quality of life that I think both Canadians and Americans share, given the fact that these cottage communities were built over many years and the ownership is multi-generational.