Like Monsieur Landry, and as I said, I've been at this as a scientist for 29 years, I don't think I've ever seen such an incredible mobilization of human effort against a development project in an area so sparsely populated, relatively, as I have in Belledune. Two and a half thousand people showed up on a sunny November day to say they were not happy about the way this facility came in, and the process.
It really is remarkable, but people given lemons make lemonade up there. Do you know that expression? And what they have done is form a committee that is looking to the future of the Baie des Chaleurs. In some ways this was a wake-up call to them, that if they were going to take the future of their bay to heart and if they wanted to take a direct involvement, they were going to have to become more engaged and were going to have to come up with a plan for future development for the bay. They are doing that. They are looking at a forum that they'd like to have in about a year's time to consider what kind of development they want in the bay.