Well, obviously, the U.S. first, because it's closest to us in terms of what you see in cities like San Francisco and in the Los Angeles example I mentioned, which is the car capital of the world, yet they're building subways galore and the citizens have voted in favour of a sales tax increase to fund the transit there. Atlanta, Seattle...about to happen in November.
For all of these kinds of things, the U.S. federal government, the states, and the municipalities, through a combination of different funding sources and tools, have in fact done reasonably well in many of these cities. Some of them are a disaster area--don't get me wrong--but I think we can look to the ones that have really done some creative stuff.
So that's one.
In terms of Europe, we've talked about it, and most people are pretty familiar with the transit systems there. If you just take London as an example, because it's obviously a huge world city, I can't imagine that place working without all those commuter rail lines, the subway networks, and the bus networks, etc. These aren't luxuries. These are things you must have to make these city regions work.
Even Sydney, Australia--I was there a couple of years ago--in terms of the system they have there and how they fund it.... There are so many examples. Quite frankly, probably the best I've ever seen is in Tokyo, which blows your mind away, because if the train is 30 seconds late, somebody gets fired. It's unbelievable. It's precision. It's just unreal.