Exactly, and that's part of why we're here, to try to get away from the false impression that everybody out here is working. There are some great opportunities here and a heck of a lot of work to be done here, but unfortunately, we're seeing some people trying to put a spin on things that, gee, I can't find guys, I can't find guys, I can't find guys. What they're really saying is they can't find guys who will work for less than the prevailing rates out here.
Part of the problem, too, in why some workers aren't coming out here is that they may be sitting in an area of Canada where they've got a bit of a depressed economy—there are pockets around Canada where there are areas of unemployment, with ironworkers and some other trades—where they'd be more than willing to move out here to take a job if they could get the price of a plane fare and maybe a week's accommodation in their pockets. That's why I'd like to see perhaps the federal government take a look at that surplus we've got in the EI program. Maybe somehow through that we can provide some type of an incentive where a guy perhaps gets the price of an air ticket and one week's accommodation. He's at least got a foothold to get himself into the area and get started.