That's interesting. It's pretty much the antithesis of whatever the NDP stands for.
Mr. Hollands, you talked about procurement habituation. Could you please expand upon that? I found that to be very interesting. It seems to me a lot of what you're saying is that purchasing decisions are based on old information, and it's largely a result of this closed-shop process that cities are facing, and that leads perhaps to more being spent on process and perhaps labour, and as a result the product that is used is inferior.
Is that what you were getting at, or is it a possibility?