Thanks. It's an important part of our history.
My last question is open-ended. Drawing on my experience.... I've been here before, municipally, provincially and now federally, and it's always the same thing. The community wants to save them; the citizens want to save them; and the local government or the government—in whatever order—just doesn't have the means.
Does it make any practical sense for any of the political parties, or all of them, to put forward a platform for some kind of coordination in the next election? With all due respect to provincial jurisdiction and municipal rights—and again I've been there, and nobody embraces those more than I do—the buildings that we're talking about are in the same place, whether we're talking about the municipal government, the provincial government or the federal government. The building is still in the same place. It's the same one building.
Is there any chance that we could have national, coordinated—not forcing anybody, and respecting rights—efforts so that all three entities that want to preserve a given entity could partner in that? Does that exist right now and it's just not working, or is what I'm suggesting just not practical?