I mentioned our capital region board. There was actually a ministerial order by the province that we had to work together. That's in the Edmonton region. Further south in Alberta, the Calgary region does not have that same ministerial order, and they have struggled in trying to find that collaboration.
I guess that I almost would want to point to the success of the capital region board. We have developed this growth plan. The board voted unanimously for it. We are talking about doing economic development as a region instead of as individual municipalities, etc., so maybe pointing to successful examples of regional collaboration is the way to go.
Eight years ago, it was mandated by the province. There were a lot of negative feelings about that. There are still some residual feelings there, but the successes and the benefits of belonging to a region far outweigh the local autonomy losses.