I don't think the bureaucratic entanglement we get into is necessarily a cost measure, other than the interest we pay on short-term loans that we take out. I don't think that's going to go a long way to bringing us from the $130,000 on average we have up to the $200,000 on average that's required. I think it's merely a function of the heat, the hydro, the insurance, the staffing dollars. Everything has gone up in cost. Our costs remain fixed. There's been about a 50% impact on our purchasing dollar on the ground. We're trying to catch up in terms of the funding these front-line agencies receive.
So I don't think there'd be cost savings per se.