Maybe starting at the micro level in economic terms for our company, we employ, as I said, 700 to 800 people, depending on the particular phase of production. Beyond that, there's a whole contracted community that's probably three times that. We enforce on that entire ecosystem of let's say 4,000 people, but they all touch another 10,000 people, anti-corruption. We spend $80 million in Honduras buying services, paying people, and we enforce our anti-corruption policy through that entire supply chain. We have 700 people on the job, plus the contractors.
The biggest human rights impact in the mining sector is safety. We enforce our safety standards across all 700 of those people and all 3,000 contractors who work for them. We are one of only two mines in Honduras. There should be 20 mines in Honduras. If there were 20 mining companies doing the same thing we were doing, it would spread.
We are basically, in a way, propagating the faith of CSR.