I do. Prior to the creation of Island Waste Management, the municipalities would look after that service, and it would be included in their municipal tax bill. There really wasn't any clear tracking of the waste component of their taxes. So it's very difficult to compare. But the $205 isn't per person, it is per household. I want to make that clear. It's per household, and for that $205 we provide each resident with collection carts. In P.E.I. they happen to be green and black, one for compost, and one for waste. We basically maintain those carts forever and a day.
So it's $205 per household. As for how that compares, the only thing I can say is that prior to waste watch, it wouldn't be uncommon for someone in a rural area of P.E.I. to have their waste collected by an individual—probably not really in the waste management business per se in a big way—and to pay $10 a week or $520 a year. Our rate is $205, which we are able to do through economies of scale and also because the recycler or the collection recycler takes back the market value of those recyclables that are collected from households. So in an indirect way, the consumer is benefiting from having a lower rate because the contractor is taking the recyclables out and using those to offset the costs of the collection for the homeowner.
Is that clear?