We haven't got to that point. We have a staff, a well-trained staff, and we have computer modelling that we use to tell us when to pull logs. We work with all the cottage associations also. They're worried about water levels now, a lot of them for the wrong reasons. A lot of them it's because they hit their prop on the rock, not because of the shorelines or whatever.
But, no, we do have a system in place to manage all the dams.
The one problem we do have, however, is for the 39 dams that we own, there are another 39 dams we don't own. They're privately owned, and nobody has any legislation over how those private people manage their dams. We can step in when it comes to what they're doing with water levels, but if a dam is falling apart we can't do anything about it. The province's hands are sort of tied. If you buy a piece of property and find out it's got a dam that goes with the deed, and it's going to cost you $200,000 to do a study and fix it, you're probably not going to do anything.