Again, when it comes to site specific, we're more familiar with the Ontario situations. Toronto has a big green bin program—they take materials to big composting facilities—so they're trying to keep all of that kind of biological degradable waste out of their landfill.
Guelph was a pioneer in terms of mixed waste recovery and separation, and it's still headed in that direction.
Ontario ran a whole consultation on the concept of zero waste about four or five years ago, which we did support. It's a devil-in-the-details kind of thing.
When we spoke earlier about not having landfill and emissions—and we know we're a very long way from that—in an ideal world, you would see all of the components that are going into our waste stream being recovered and put back into some sort of productive use and never landfilling again. That would be the ideal. But we certainly don't want to trade that off by saying let's burn it all and have energy recovery, if it means that the emissions have health consequences. That's where we need to do that analysis, case by case.