I'll give you an example. I'm sure that Mr. McTeague can comment on this as well.
If you're leaving Toronto and driving north, up to my community in Sudbury, you're filling up in Toronto—I'm going to pick a number out of the air—at $1.28. You get up to Parry Sound and you're at $1.30. You hit Sudbury and you're at $1.39. Go west for a half an hour and you're at $1.26.
What gets us, especially in northern and rural areas, is that there seems to be some type of...I don't want to use the word “collusion”, but that's what the communities are talking about. That's what people are talking about, right? They're asking why it is that they can drive 20 minutes outside of my community and get gas at 15¢ to 20¢ a litre cheaper. So if we're looking at competition, there seems to be something going on.