Again, when you look to the increasing population—and we on our part had a doubling of population—any facility that would have been in federal jurisdiction would have experienced what every other association in the community has experienced. You only have so much space, so much staff, and so much capacity to process what comes in; but if you double, triple, and then eventually quadruple that population, you're going to require four times the service capacity that existed before.
I don't think we're looking for a host of new services, other than the potential to have immigration officers in the community. I have the most incredibly multiculturally diverse community. When you look at our school system, we have no less than 100 different countries represented in our public school system. I think I've heard numbers of 127 different countries in the community. Many of them will go through the citizenship ceremonies right here in Wood Buffalo. The necessity for all the transactions that occur forces them to go out of town to get those things addressed.
That would be a new service, and even if it's an exception for a unique place in Canada, it's not about the temporary labour and not about just being able to satisfy oil sands; it's about the combination of all of those entities that would really benefit from having something locally.