Certainly trust is much more than words and statements. Trust is defined by actions, so we are very much focused on actions with all of our indigenous communities. We have made significant adjustments in our communication of protocols. We're being very transparent and providing regular updates to the communities. We are meeting with members of those communities, across their organizations at all levels, including at my level, and we're going into the communities and offering, if you will, town halls and open houses.
Similarly, we've invited all of the communities to come to Kearl so that they can see the incidents first-hand. They can see the mitigation steps we're taking. We've offered for them to take their own water samples in order to help them build confidence, if that's what it takes.
Through all of those actions and a further demonstration of our commitment to this relationship, we hope we will rebuild trust. Trust is something that takes a long time to build. I use the analogy of a very intricate piece of crystal artwork that could take hours, days, weeks and months to build, and then in one misstep, you drop it and it shatters. It then takes day, months and years to rebuild. That's where we are. We dropped it and it shattered, and now we're going to invest all the time and commitment it takes to rebuild it. This is critically important to us as an organization.