Perfect.
You talked about smart cities and the transportation component of it that you have listed in the budget. It speaks to monies that will be allocated based on ridership. In that context there are a lot of communities that will be left out because they don't have the infrastructure and they won't get the funding allocated, because, of course, it's based on ridership.
I want to talk about Smart21, which has been up and running since 2006. We've had winners of Ottawa, Edmonton, New Westminster, and Montreal in the top seven global cities. I'm proud to say that Surrey was a winner in 2014, 2015, and 2016.
This comes back to my point in terms of smaller cities accessing those dollars for transportation. Will you remove that component out of the budget, that the allocation is based on ridership only?