The national building trades have been focusing on using the program to bring the labour force in from the United States. We have a policy where it's local workers first, then provincial, then national, and then our next step is the United States. We've been working on workers in Michigan with the same skills, the same language, the same health and safety training, getting them to Alberta, to where the work is.
In terms of the trades we represent nationally, I think in 2011—I'm still waiting for StatsCan to give me 2012 numbers—only 5,200 or 5,400 TFWs came in under the trades we represent. The first source country is the U.S.
So to answer your question directly, obviously we represent workers, so we're going to do what's best for workers. There's no difference on our site between a temporary foreign worker and a Canadian. At the end of the day, the treatment they receive is exactly the same under the collective bargaining agreement on our sites—