Well, it's complicated in the sense that we now have a resource that is roughly 10% of what it was when we entered Canada, according to the scientists, and this is a very careful assessment of the state of the resources by scientists—and good ones too, Canadians.That's 10%, okay? We're 22 years into a moratorium, which is supposed to be a rebuilding program, and Canada as a country has failed to deal with the problems in rebuilding the resource. But once it's rebuilt, we go back to where we were. There was something in the order of 20,000 jobs.
When a new company took over from the company I operated for 40 years, it had one plant that employed, let's say, 1,000 people. Those 1,000 people, I remind you, are the equivalent of 26,000 jobs in Ontario on a per capita basis. Our population is 500,000, so you can imagine what the impact is of the loss of 1,000 jobs in one community. That was not alone. There were others that employed less than 1,000, like 500, 400, and so on. But altogether, as I said, the onshore activity was in the vicinity of 20,000 jobs. In addition to that, you've got the goods and services industry that's added to it, and I won't go into that number because I don't know it, but the university tells me that for every full-time job, it's roughly 2.2 jobs in the goods and services industry.