Yes, I would agree with you there. Not being in British Columbia every week, I depend on the people like Tom Sigurdson from the British Columbia and Yukon Territory Building and Construction Trades Council. Last week we had a Canadian building trades policy conference. We held it over on the Quebec side, and this was a major topic at our conference. There's a tremendous amount of abuse there. It's not just in that mining program that they were caught. There were other things going on, and I guess when you're living it every day, it's quite a bit different than if you're 3,000 miles away from it.
But I don't believe that it's any less rampant in Toronto. I don't believe it's any less rampant in Saskatchewan or anywhere else. They were caught in British Columbia, that's all. It's going on, and it is straight abuse. It is people drilling a tunnel for a roadway, making $500 a month—in 2011, in Canada. That's disgraceful.
I hate to go back to this, but it's something that really strikes me. In 2008 or 2009, we had three Chinese boilermakers die at Canadian Natural Resources when a tank collapsed on them. Nobody in this room knows their names because on the same day that those three workers died—a tank collapsed on them—we lost 1,500 ducks in a spill pond at Syncrude. That occupied the newspaper for two months, but nobody could tell you their names, and most people in Canada don't even know that those three Chinese workers died. What did they come here for? They came here to make a living, work safely, and get paid.