As I said before, I think it has changed that culture incrementally towards one in which the government now seriously considers the use of wood and has done a lot of wood buildings.
There's one part of it in which I was disappointed. In the bill, there's a clause that allows for reporting, such that the lieutenant-governor can set up regulations that require reporting out about whether, when the government has built a building, it been wood or not.
That regulation has never been implemented, so we don't have any reporting. That was something I was disappointed in. I was hoping to come here and dump a lot of statistics on you about exactly how well it's done, but we don't have that.
There are a lot of pictures up on various sites of beautiful wooden buildings, government wooden buildings in British Columbia. I'm sure it has worked well in those cases, but I know they're still building schools out of cement and steel in British Columbia on occasion as well, so I assume that it's not 100% of all provincial buildings that are wood.
It has changed that culture, and that's what I think is really important.