That clarifies to a certain degree the issue.
I guess one of my concerns is that there is no new money in this. You're taking from existing funds. We're adding more players who can draw out of that fund, players identified as having billions of dollars of needs, and they're also in competition.
I'm glad you brought up the Windsor-Detroit gateway. It's the first time you've beaten me to the punch on that, and I thank you for that, and that hopefully means something. We know that we need billions of dollars of infrastructure down there, and the concern is that we'll draw out of this fund in competition with very worthy projects. So I want to hear, basically, whether the government is committed to more money in this fund for the ports.
A philosophical question coming from it, though, is why, under this bill, you even have to give them access to those funds. When we look at the borrowing limits and the long-term debt they can now incur--and this table shows billions of dollars they can now have access to--why would they need public funds? Is it because there are no private investors? Are we concerned about that? Is it a part of the P3s? What is it they need now? Because they have an incredible amount of capital they can now access through borrowing and long-term debt. Why is it that they even need to compete with other border projects?