I know that we shared the detailed study with the clerk's office. I know it was getting translated; I'm not sure if it got translated in time, but there is an opportunity to review the study.
On page 17 of the study, we outline what the annual program spending is for each of the fuel types, and that's the input that goes into creating the net benefit of the GDP growth. If you look at it, it's $1.3 billion in actual cost to implement the types of programs. These are the things that we talk about as far as generating energy efficiency programs to provide incentives is concerned, to get to the market transformation, potentially codes and standards and things. That input is then compared again to what the output in economic activity is and the GDP and job growth that is created. The net was the number that we state.