Thank you for the question.
Being on the international border, we are very unique here in that we own our half of the Windsor-Detroit tunnel. The City of Detroit owns their half. It's really the only case like this between the United States and Canada. With the approval of the board, which we got—unanimous approval—we have the ability, as the board said, to close the tunnel down as often as we need for as long as we need to be able to facilitate vaccination at the centre line.
We actually drew the line in the tunnel. The idea here is that on the U.S. side, we have multiple offers from folks who live in Canada, from Canadians, to facilitate and to secure the vaccines. We're trying to find a way to do this that is maybe not the easiest. There are better solutions that are more optimal, but we're trying to find a practical way to deal with all of the logistics on both sides of the border. We can close the tunnel, bring people down and vaccinate them right at the border line. Then they'd be fully vaccinated Canadians.
You know what? Guess what? It would be better for everyone else in Canada who is waiting for a vaccine. We've acquired other vaccines from other sources, and everyone else would move up on the list faster.