I think it's fair to say that generally consumers would like to have that clarity and that standard right across the country, in order to understand the playing field and understand what their costs are not only for the actual ticket itself, but as is increasingly happening, for the on-board travel fees that people are required to pay to get something to eat, to have a blanket, to have a pillow, to watch television. That's an increasing, creeping aspect of air travel that folks like me, from British Columbia, experience. I travel in economy most of the time, and that's what we have to put up with. Do we have enough money to buy a sandwich on board for a five-hour flight, and sometimes an eight-hour flight if it's through Toronto?
It would seem to me that the air industry would support having that clarity for people to know what the actual cost is, in the same way that when you go to a grocery store and you pick up that item, you know what the cost is going to be, plus the tax.