I'll start with Saskatchewan. We operate the Midale Unit, which is a CO2 enhanced recovery injection unit. It's offset by the Weyburn Unit.
All the people in that area are local people, local guys. We're part of that community. We've been in that community for a long time. We see ourselves as trying to be the most responsible we can be, because we live there. Our people live there. The Apache people are from there.
In the new areas we go into, we understand there are people who don't understand what we do. I have to be honest with you, a lot of people have no idea what we actually do for a living and what we've done for a living for many years. In areas like New Brunswick, we were down there early on. We tried to talk to as many people as we could--environmental groups, community groups--to give them the data to understand what we do and who we are. We let them look us in the eyes and ask us questions, and we try to be a part of that community. We're going to live there for the next many years, and the people who will work for us will be in that community.
In Horn River we were a little bit innovative. I have to be honest with you that it didn't have anything to do with me; I wasn't there yet. I've only been there for a short while. But the guys created the Horn River group of producers. They got together our producers in the Horn River area and talked about issues. They talked to the community, the first nations, and anybody who would talk to them. They tried to explain what they did, how they did it, and what to expect with the activity there.