From my perspective, what I've seen be successful in my area of Fort McMurray, which I think.... Listening to Mr. Audla, it seems that he's 30 years back from where Fort McMurray was, or Fort McMurray 30 years ago was where his community is. I would encourage you to look at Fort McMurray's model.
Hard work, creativity, and results should be rewarded. I think that's ultimately what I take as a difference of opinion from what I read in some of the book's contents. I'm wondering what your comment would be on that. Fort McMurray, for instance, just over the last little while, has the highest employment rate for aboriginals in the country—15% for some plant sites, and some have 10%. They employ literally thousands of aboriginals who have grade 12 or grade 10 educations, and they do a proactive aboriginal training program with the high schools and with the colleges, and in fact it is commercially driven.
The success rate, for instance, of aboriginal populations is tremendous. The highest household income in the country is there in Fort McMurray, and those are people who do not have university educations or jobs. They're adding 7% or 8% to the GDP.
I see Mr. Myers is nodding his head in agreement.
Could you comment on that, Mr. Myers?