It's critical, and of course it goes up and down a little bit with the price of oil, but not as much as one would expect.
One of the things that the Affordable Energy Coalition has tried to do in Nova Scotia is to have poverty be one of the elements that could figure into the rate structure of NSPI. The Supreme Court of Nova Scotia has rejected that, and now it's hopefully going to the federal level. We have no impact on what the judges will support, but that would be one thing, to get poverty recognized as something relevant in terms of setting the price of an extremely basic commodity. I talked to a woman the other day, and she has to have candles on because she can't afford the electricity. It is an expensive thing. I have made appearances before the board here ,and we just don't seem to get anywhere with it. It's not NSPI that's against it. It's the legal system that doesn't allow poverty to be treated as an entity when we're looking at rate structures.