I can't go into the big spiel I'd normally give you about this, because she'd cut me off again.
First off, our department of consultation started off with one person three years ago. Now it's at nine people in the office and 40 people in the field. It sustains itself and brings revenue back in. We're looking to form partnerships with other cities and people now to do some of the work that's required. We are creating our own environmental regulations and our own standards. We began that work about a year ago. We have created our water committee. They are looking at evaluation tools of our own for the waters, and monitoring systems, so that we will not be reliant on anybody else for those. We will be using our own systems to determine impacts and that type of thing.
That's been our undertaking, although it may not be on the scale that they have. We have also started an outreach, or what we call an ambassadorship program, where a member or somebody, a friend of ours, will be the ambassador to a city or to different areas within our lands. They'll go out and educate and promote.