Okay. Now, you know Fort McMurray is an anomaly by itself. In 1967, 1,500 people lived there and I was one of those people. In 1999, 30,000 people lived there, and today we have 100,000 full-time residents and probably another 45,000 people working there, Canadians working there. So about 140,000 people work in the oil sands or live in the oil sands area, and it's a very impressive story.
The story you've given me—and we talked just briefly beforehand—is a story I hear all the time. Whether they're in Quebec or Ontario or the Maritimes, people have companies that produce things for the oil sands. You've mentioned that three-quarters of your equipment currently goes to the oil sands or the potash companies in Saskatchewan. I think people don't recognize that there are 40,000 jobs, notwithstanding the oil sands, 40,000 people who work for oil sands companies or related manufacturing in Ontario. There are 40,000 people, of whom you have some, who say they are directly or indirectly working for the oil sands companies.