As we have said, the important thing is that if there is an infrastructure plan with certain principles and resources in place, then municipalities can see long term. The beauty of the gas tax is that municipalities have a stable, predictable resource outside of the property tax, so they can finance using it and they can predict and plan for the future using that.
What we are saying is that it doesn't have to be the gas tax, but if some of those principles are in place for an infrastructure program that is long term, then the municipalities have the capacity to see the future financially, understand the future in terms of their needs because of their own analyses of their communities and the expected growth, etc. Because the programming is predictable and long term, they can marry resources with plans. Without a longer-term perspective, without the programs or financing and planning that is based on our principles or others that may be consistent with those principles, municipalities can't predict the long term and they can't say they can borrow based on the future gas tax revenues, because if those aren't predictable and long term, then they can't marry the needs with their long-term financing requirements.