That is a very important question.
The O'Brien commission recommended that affordability be a key test of the equalization program. When the O'Brien report was written, the price of oil was less than $40 per barrel. Last year it climbed to $145 per barrel and then it fell by 75%. One of the things affected by that...I think people did anticipate some growth in the program, but not 55% over five years. The structure of the equalization program is based on a three-year average of GDP across the country to smooth out differences, and then there's a two-year lag. We had this large spike in resource wealth to $145 per barrel, which then fell by 75%. Under the O'Brien formula we would have been required over the next five years to equalize that revenue that no longer existed. In fact, consistent with recommendations from the O'Brien report, the government is limiting the growth of the overall program using the method for allocating within that program.