You have to look at our programs as kind of a continuum of interventions on the part of the federal government. If you look at the gas tax fund, it's a transfer of funding to municipalities, which allows the municipalities to make their own decisions with respect to their priorities. We don't get directly involved with municipalities in terms of priority setting.
The same thing could be said with our provincial-territorial infrastructure component program under the new building Canada fund, where we leave it up to provinces and territories to determine priorities within their own jurisdictions. They will more than likely consult with municipalities and other asset holders to determine what the priorities are going to be. They provide us with priority lists of products, which we then do a review on.
The only case in which we prioritize projects to a certain extent would be under the national infrastructure component of the new building Canada fund, or the $4 billion fund, where we assess projects that are of national significance in Canada. Those could be port projects, road or major highway projects, rail projects, and so on.