It's the same thing if you look at some of the mine development operations in Newfoundland and Labrador. There's exactly the same problem. This isn't isolated, certainly, to Alberta or the Fort McMurray area; it's a problem right across the country.
The other problem with that, which we're certainly seeing in Alberta, is that you get high school students who are coming out at 17 and 18 years of age with the promise of a job earning $80,000 or $90,000 or more a year. What ends up happening is they're unqualified, really, for much beyond general labour in the oil sands. They have very limited skills. Over a number of years it looks really good, and they're making all this money. They go from living in their parents' basement to making $100,000 a year. But there's really a limited growth potential for them there. They don't have the education or the background to get into a lot of the apprenticeship programs and a lot of the skilled trades. There's that side of the problem as well. Certainly I've seen much more of that problem in Alberta, and to some degree in Saskatchewan, than in other places in the country, but there's a definite problem.