Yes. I've been explaining what the government has been doing in public transit over the last decade. I think it's very important to note that the government in the last budget, as I talked about briefly in my opening remarks, has announced this process to undertake a long-term consultation with respect to infrastructure. Obviously transit will be a very big part of that. We know that transit is a very large consumer, if you will, of our program dollars. It is a very important issue for the larger cities in Canada. These issues will have an opportunity to be addressed again in the context of whatever the government brings forward at the conclusion of Building Canada in 2014.
That being said, what Canada is doing right now is a lot more than what it's done in the past in terms of transit. The quantum has gone from virtually nothing to, as I said, $5 billion. The municipal sector is largely, I think, on the whole appreciative of the efforts of the Government of Canada in this area. There isn't another substantive policy area that you could point to where federal funding has grown as quickly in the last decade as infrastructure as a whole, and public transit in general. If you're a mayor or a premier, I think you'd like to see the federal government continue to be that type of constructive partner.