Certainly. Our most obvious comparison in the amusement industry, and probably the largest component of it, is next door in the United States where there's been a whole different approach to COVID-19 and how it's been managed. Some of those parks remained open through most of this. Many in the last couple of weeks have ramped up to full capacity with the removal of mask mandates. I'm not really sure how all that is going to work out.
Locally, we have to work with our chief public health office. In Prince Edward Island, we have benefited for the most part and from a public health point of view, but we have an extremely conservative and careful approach. Rapid testing—and that being administered in businesses and that—has not been part of their current arsenal. It's something we would certainly look at and we have been doing a jurisdictional scan.
Ultimately, if travel restrictions and capacity limits aren't going to be lifted in the next 30, 40 or 50.... This season is gone. As for a recovery in August, I can't just open an amusement park full speed on August 1 and run it for 30 days. It takes time to get there. There have to be procedures in place.
We are looking. We would certainly welcome any different approach, less so looking at Europe and more so currently looking at the United States.