I'd like to respond to that one.
There is no question that there is a need for this country to look at its infrastructure from the perspective of resilience and from the perspective of the impacts of climate change and greenhouse gas emission reduction.
We believe there are great opportunities. Municipalities own directly or indirectly the sources of about 44% of the GHG emissions in this country. In individual initiatives across the country there are many interesting things happening that are addressing local GHG emission challenges.
Our concern is that there's an opportunity being missed by not creating a way of having a national perspective on this that can mobilize the knowledge and experience at the municipal level for the kinds of things municipalities are responsible for so that, rather than having municipalities left alone to do their work that needs to be done, they are supported in a framework that is all orders of government rowing in the same direction.
Some of that can be done through the building Canada fund. It would be stronger if there were a dedicated municipal component to that fund outside of the small communities component, but I think there is an opportunity that the municipalities, were that to roll up to a national level, could be a significant contributor to a national initiative, a national approach to our greenhouse gas emissions plan.