There are no applications before any government body, federally, provincially, municipally, that I'm aware of for the twinning of the Ambassador Bridge. Some like to leave the impression they're all ready to go, that if the government would just stamp their form they could twin that bridge tomorrow, when in fact a huge amount of work has been done by successive Ontario governments, by this and the previous federal government, by the city. A huge amount of effort has gone in, and I think that simply for national security reasons and economic security reasons to twin an existing bridge after 9/11 is not a good idea; it's distinctly a bad idea. If anything happened to that bridge, the southwestern Ontario economy and the Michigan economy could come to their knees in a matter of days if not a matter of hours. So we're deeply concerned about that.
There is just an unprecedented consensus on the need for a second bridge over the Detroit River. You have the Premier of Ontario, the Prime Minister of Canada. You have the infrastructure minister, the finance minister here. You have Governor Granholm very strongly in support, as well as her predecessors, Governors Engler and Blanchard. You have Ray LaHood, the U.S. Secretary of Transportation, who spoke out very strongly this week for a second bridge. You have the mayor of Windsor, the mayor of Detroit. You have the two Liberal cabinet ministers from Windsor. You have your own strong leadership in this regard. All the stars are aligned to give this boost to the manufacturing sectors of Ontario and Quebec. We need to get it done. We have a very tough road ahead, though. It is going to be very tough in the Senate, in Lansing. At this stage I'm not optimistic we can get it through.