I'll try to make it quick.
With the white sturgeon, there was a process where a form was sent out to industry, local NGOs, and local communities. Then there were open houses. It was a very short-term thing, and my recollection is that there was about a two-week turnaround, which was obviously incompatible with doing anything on socio-economics.
BC Hydro at the time felt that there wouldn't be a major effect on the listing, because we operate in that portion of the river under the Columbia River Treaty, which obviously dictates certain terms and conditions for the hydrograph. That doesn't necessarily happen. There are discussions now on how we modify things. The interesting thing is that we now watch the COSEWIC list, because you can tell roughly about a year in advance of when things are going to happen.
We do our own monitoring to make darn sure that we're aware of what's going on well in advance so that we can seek the opportunities to give information to the agencies. It isn't necessarily the other way around.