Our organization specifically has not, but on general principles, water metering is I think desirable. People should know how much water they're using. I think that's a given. I know that a lot of communities in Canada are moving towards that.
I'll go back to consumer trust. Our assumption is that standards are set for how these things work. Our assumption is that the way you enforce standards is by having inspections. In the strongest terminology, I guess I would say that it's industry's responsibility to ensure that their equipment functions the way it ought to, and if a two-year inspection regime isn't sufficient, then maybe you need to look at something else at strengthening that.
But the standards are in place, I gather. It's the inspection regime that is the key to the whole thing, so anything you can do to strengthen that and make sure that inspection regime is above reproach will build consumer confidence, which is what this is about.