Thank you. I want to thank our guests today. Thank you for coming and sharing that.
I come from the opposite end of the country, where we have a lovely railway museum, in St. John's, Newfoundland. We don't have a railway any more, but we certainly do have a rich culture of it. It goes back to the stories of the Newfie Bullet, which actually existed. It was a very slow train; that's why they called it the Newfie Bullet. That's true. I'm sure you've heard of it.
In our communities across the province, we have a lot of railway cars, whether they are luxury cars or transport cars or snowplows, and they exist here, there, and everywhere, and there seems to be no organization to them. They seem to be madly off in all directions, that sort of thing.
In your experience with this stuff, what is out there that we haven't restored yet at this point? Maybe you can translate this into percentage terms. We've got a general idea of what has been done. I'm not asking for specific numbers, but it would be great if you had them.