Yes. We have reduced the number of boil-water advisories from 350 to 170. That is substantial progress. We have increased the number of trained operators from 80 to 350, and we are proud of that. We have increased the number of water treatment plants from five to 25, so we have made progress in each and every area.
The most important thing we have done is to put all drinking water quality data in the public domain. Any member of the public, anywhere in the country, can go to our web page, select the particular community, see the quality of drinking water in that particular community and see if their community on a boil-water advisory.
I think that during last 20 to 25 years, we have made substantial progress, but still there is lots of work to be done, especially in the small rural communities and the northern communities. We maintain a very good working relationship with our indigenous communities. We offer all those programs to those communities that we offer to non-indigenous communities.