In British Columbia? The Environmental Assessment Act process and legislation was introduced in 1995. When the B.C. Liberal administration came in, they started to remove things and water it down. There was a tremendous amount of pressure by companies to do so, and they're sympathetic to that, so they started doing that. And they did it across the board. So we have an atmosphere in British Columbia where we've gone back in time. We've gone back to the 1980s with the Social Credit government. We're headed backwards--sorry about that.
What I'm saying is that this has become a problem. And there's a bigger problem. What we also see is we see the tar sands, we see the federal government allowing things to go on to the Fisheries Act, etc. The way I'm looking at it now is that the tar sands have lowered the environmental bars and are creating kind of a ripple across Canada. In British Columbia there's apparently very little that the public thinks it can do with the government to change these things. They're very concerned about what's going on, but they seem very powerless.
I don't know if that really answers your question. I don't know where we're going to be going, but what I'm trying to say is, listen, we see this in the United States, we see this in Quebec here right now. There's a big rush to develop all these things. Let's slow down, let's take a look. I've been up there to see things. I've heard some of the reports by the first nations in their presentation to the National Energy Board about new pipeline corridors, their concerns about what's going to happen to the wildlife. Sure, there are no people who live in this area. As Tim says, there's wildlife, there are fish, there are streams. This is wilderness full of wildlife.