The one thing about forest pests is that once you have an outbreak it is very difficult to eradicate. These outbreaks of the spruce budworm, for example, occur every 25 or 30 years or so. When they take hold, it is very difficult to actually eradicate this outbreak. So you try to control it. You try through different interventions to slow it down, to mitigate it as well as you can, but there simply is no remedy. We saw this with the mountain pine beetle. Had there been a way to ensure this was addressed in British Columbia—and it is now moving to Alberta and potentially Saskatchewan—certainly we would have devoted the resources. But you can't in a sense. You do what you can in terms of mitigating, and we're working collaboratively with the province.
I think we're doing good work. I think it is helping and we have been able to slow things down, but those things are difficult for the economies of the affected regions. Basically, it's a matter of applying best efforts.