Government provided $17.5 million, I think, over five years for Asian carp. You asked what we are doing with the funding—we've talked about that in the past—and what we actually think is happening with respect to Asian carp. There are concerns. There's been a number of cases where an Asian carp is picked out of the lake, or in a river that's near the lake, which is part of—and this is Lake Erie, by the way—the Great Lakes basin.
We've done tests to see.... There was one that was 41 inches, but it was triploid which means it was sterile, which means it was used for aquaculture purposes.
There are some that have been reported on the U.S. side, in Ohio's Sandusky River, that there are concerns about. There are eDNA tests that we do constantly which suggest that we do not believe there's evidence that it's been established.
I was at the Great Lakes Fishery Commission meetings last week, and I was asking the scientists whether they believe it's established. There's no evidence that it has been established, but there is more and more concern. There's more and more concern, not about the Chicago sanitary canal, but other vectors that they may be able to get in on.
We are ever vigilant, working closely with the U.S. It's a major topic at the IJC and the Great Lakes Fishery Commission and Great Lakes Executive Committee, but it remains a challenge.
That's basically where we are. Lake Erie is the current challenge, I would say.