I think it's key to that, Ms. Gillis, and I thank you for that. This is the bottom line, the discussion that we're having today. If we don't have those mechanisms, those levers, in place with all these programs that we've introduced since 2015—whether it be the disaster mitigation fund, the CIB, the accelerator, the GST, and of course, lastly, the Canada community-building fund we spoke of—simply put, it ends up on the property taxpayer. When you look at your water bill at the end of the month and you see those two charges, one is your operating charge that you can control, based on what you use, but the other one is an actual capital fixed rate you can't control. If, in fact, we don't have these programs in place, when you look at that water bill, you see that that capital fixed rate just gets bigger and bigger, because of the work that has to be done. On the other side of that is your property tax bill. Both rise without these programs.
With these programs in place, it mitigates some of the challenges that the property taxpayer and the water bill payer would otherwise pay.