I will say it's not always about what cities are spending their money on, although we do have some questions on that from time to time. It's how they spend the money. There is the fact that municipalities have massively underfunded pensions. The federal government has taken some steps to address this, and the Ontario government is taking some steps to address underfunded pensions. Municipalities have only recently started to admit just how underfunded their pensions are. The fact that wages and benefits levels have exceeded any in the private sector, along with the fact that now public sector workers are making vastly more than those doing similar occupations in the private sector, is the problem.
It's not necessarily just what cities are spending their money on, but how they're spending that money. We're not spending it on infrastructure, because all of the dollars are getting sucked up in salaries, benefits, and increasingly, pensions for workers. If we started to make those more reasonable, we think cities would find lots of extra dollars to dedicate to infrastructure and then the maintenance of that infrastructure.