Municipalities also like to employ local people. One of the things the federal government has signalled that they're going to do is attach conditions to some money that will require local training, local apprenticeships on big municipal projects. I think that will dovetail with something that municipalities—at least my municipality—has been trying to do, when unemployment is 8% and 10% and 12%, to try to use the money that's being spent to create employment in the municipality, which seems to be a good thing.
In fact, in the City of Toronto they made sure that people in Thunder Bay stayed employed by sole-sourcing with Bombardier against quite a bit of controversy, but at the end of the day they're getting a good product for a good price and the province of Ontario is keeping a whole lot of people employed.
But you mentioned CETA. I know that the City of Toronto is very worried about CETA in that it may prevent them from having these local hiring policies that would in fact force them to take their own infrastructure money and spend it somewhere else, even though it doesn't make economic sense for the city. Can you comment on that?