No. As we speak, the federal government has a lot of work under way on the woodland boreal caribou. We are doing three types of activities. We have science work under way, we're currently collecting aboriginal traditional knowledge and community knowledge, and we have a lot of consultation under way across the country as it relates to the population objectives and distribution and to the threats and the practices that can help mitigate them. As well, there is scientific work that is trying to come up with what the relationship is between the disturbance on the ground and the needs and implications for the caribou.
Our expectation is that for this species, which is very challenging from a biological perspective, we will have a recovery strategy, with critical habitat identified, in at least a draft stage in the summer of 2011. I know that this is perhaps a longer delay than all of us would like, but this is the reality. This is a biologically challenging species.