This is a framework, and within frameworks, there's never a certainty. We don't even know what the projects are going to be yet. We know certain provinces have talked about certain projects. We've heard B.C. is talking about Site D and Site E and Site H with Alberta. We don't know if that's going to come forward. I've also heard that Toronto wants to bring forward the subway line. We don't know how that process is going to work.
If the projects come online, I will take this government on its word that they will get the process done in two years. That's all our members want to know. They want to know that work's coming and that they are going to be able to work on it. Our members work themselves out of a job. In any given year, they'll work on anywhere between five to 15 projects for five to 10 different companies. They move. They just want to build things. For example, we represent the pipeline trade. My members don't care what's in the pipe. It could be oil, gas or hydrogen, or it could be wires. We don't care. My members just want to build, so they want to know that there are projects down the road that they can actually build and those projects will come online quickly.
We've seen what's happened with Energy East and how it got killed. Kitimat had issues. That's where the frustration is: where someone says a project is going to be built and then it doesn't come forward. There's skepticism, but there's also hope.