I can comment briefly on the experience in Labrador. We have no immediately adjacent community, but we have about seven communities that we interact with, the closest being about 40 kilometres away from our site. We're a fly-in, fly-out site.
What we're seeing is that most of the aboriginals who are working with us are living in their home communities. They aren't migrating to larger centres. They are bringing economic wealth to the communities. They are promoting themselves as roles that students can aspire to achieve. We're seeing higher graduation rates in high school and more students aspiring to do post-secondary programs.
It's just scratching the surface, though. Some of the inherent problems that we see in the north are still there, and it requires real jobs and real economic generators that I think the mining industry offers to communities to create that kind of significant shift that needs to occur.