It's been proven across North America for the last three decades. The fiscal, climate and social challenges of the automobile-scaled city were identified, and we started moving more toward transit-oriented development. The reality is that public investment in transit infrastructure is the single biggest driver of tax base, walkability, climate action, social inclusion and social equity.
Your cousin, the minister of transportation for the UCP government, recently spoke, and it was a really amazing turn. She said that access to mobility and transit is a social determinant of health, which was a really refreshing thing to hear from a UCP minister.
We know this is true. Whether we're talking about regional rail solutions between Calgary and Edmonton, whether we're talking about being able to step off a plane and take primary transit to any destination in the city, or whether we're talking about being able to visit the mountains in Calgary with a Calgary to Banff train, we know this creates incredible value. It's very marketable, but it's also an incredibly climate-forward way to go.
Does that answer the question you were going to ask?