Okay. I stand corrected. In any case, there will be a large quantity of jobs imported, and skilled labour imported, to construct the pipeline.
The problem you're referring to is a very real problem—that is, encouraging aboriginal youth to stay in high school and complete their high school education. It's a huge problem, the dropout rate up there. That comes back to the fundamentals of APG's involvement in the project. APG is not just a flash-in-the-pan, short-term-gain type of operation. We will produce a revenue stream for our aboriginal shareholders for as long as gas flows through the pipe. It's the intention of our shareholders to use that money to create better opportunities and a better way of living for aboriginal youth.
That goes to education. It goes to on-the-job training. It goes to creating employment opportunities, not just on the pipeline but elsewhere, because if they have the education and the training, as you point out, they'll get a job.