I'm not familiar enough with the competencies of the ASETS holders in Williams Lake, so it's hard for me to answer that specifically.
With B.C. AMTA or the Mine Training Society, elsewhere you have this partnership, you have the support from industry and the educators, and you have an accepted curriculum. You have the simulators, you have a lot of the necessary in-class training materials, so it works. If the ASETS holders in a particular region don't have that they're not in a position to offer the same kind of opportunity that B.C. AMTA is able to for the mining sector.
B.C. AMTA is now expanding to be much more than just mining and to play a role in other sectors.
It has been a very successful partnership model.