For the businesses that are in Regina, I'll try to break it out the best way I know how. There are the steel mills, a major industry here in Regina, so there are a lot of businesses that will cater to the steel company, whether it's pipe or sheet or whatever it might be they manufacture there. Then there are the refineries—obviously another major player in the Regina region—and there are a lot of people servicing that, whether in the service industry, pens and paper, or whatever it might be. Then there are the mines, which aren't that far out of Regina. There is the potash mine. Mosaic has a mine that's 15 or 20 minutes away. That's another major one.
And there's government. As the chamber of commerce, I'm very happy that we are in the seat of government, because there's a lot of business that takes place because we are here. A lot of our small businesses will work with government and all of the other players.
One of the things I can tell you—and I'm sorry to continue to come back to the energy sector—is that we have seen an impact here in this community from the downturn in the energy sector. Things like engineering companies that would work almost solely in the energy sector, and that previously didn't want to do any municipal planning or get involved in any of that, are now bidding for those jobs. They want those jobs, and that is some of the impact we've seen. We've seen a major company, Halliburton, that used to reside here move shop back to Calgary. We have seen some of those things and, of course, that's going to impact small business, but by and large, in challenging times, we're still doing fairly well.