What's interesting is that in the carpentry thing, the educational components are the same length, but the requirement in terms of hours is not. That makes a huge difference for young people, and it makes it difficult to keep them.
On a different note, do you have any position on right-to-repair legislation? We've talked about that at different places here. We've had independent mechanics come in and say they would like to have right-to-repair legislation in Canada, as they have in the States. This is mainly with motor vehicles. People have the right to repair another company's vehicles; they have the right to the technical information and the computer codes they need in order to do analysis and repair.
Do you have any position on that? I would think that in small rural areas you'd probably be in favour of it, because you'd have an opportunity to work on other people's machinery and that kind of thing.