That's a good question.
I do agree. I think it's very important, and I think it's something that's going to create new opportunities. It's really obvious when you sit down and look at the opportunities to fund projects of the nature that we have funded over the last eight years or so in government. I look at the water and waste-water investments that we've made, which unlock housing. I look at public transit. We don't just move people around communities. We move them from the places where they live to the places where they work and receive services, whether it's taking their kids to soccer practice or whether it's taking a bus to a medical appointment and then getting back home.
When we actually think holistically about where we're investing money in infrastructure, we can make better decisions about how we're going to either unlock more housing or make communities more livable for people. I think combining housing and infrastructure into a single ministry is going to allow us to be more efficient with the decisions we make, and we can squeeze more productivity out of every federal dollar as a result. That is my view.