I believe that is something the government does have to look at. I understand that in a lot of the RFPs coming out right now, they are asking for the impact benefit plans. The federal government is looking at their prime vendors to help them meet that 5%. That's something they have to record and monitor. What makes us a little nervous when they have these indigenous benefit plans is the follow-through. What happens if they haven't met the requirements? There have been instances in the past when an indigenous business partnered with a non-indigenous on a contract; the non-indigenous business won the contract, but when the work was actually awarded, the indigenous business was told their capabilities were no longer needed. They were utilized for that.
Again, I think it has to be incentivized. Even when you look at the U.S. government, if they don't meet that target, I believe they're put into a caution and might not have the opportunity to bid on future government contracts.