Yes. Thank you.
We've certainly had exactly the experience you're speaking of, and Richard mentioned that earlier this afternoon, a couple of examples of that. I mean, we've certainly had a situation.... I'm remembering myself in Leogane, where we were looking at the resettlement of some people into some transitional shelter, and we got very far into a conversation with one person who was the mayor of the area and very close to the end—or what we thought was the end—when another person showed up who was the mayor of the next-door area. Both were claiming to be the mayor of the piece of property we were speaking about.
We have found our way, and I'll let Richard speak a little bit more about this again. We have found our way of validating to all parties and having it sort of authorized by local authorities as to “Yes, it is going to be understood”. As we were saying earlier, we've employed some local Haitian lawyers and notaires who are helping us with this process to validate as best we can and have it be understood by all parties and the local authorities that what we are doing is on solid ground, so to speak.