It is absolutely reasonable. I would recommend that the way we start is by working with the communities, rather than working with the workers in isolation on their own. It has to be a community effort. We ran a community session in Hinton, Alberta. We brought everybody into the discussion, from the food bank to religious people to the workers. It was a wholesome conversation. It showed them that this can be a just transition for their community, because that's what's important.
When you have perhaps one local employer who for many years has provided many jobs, it has also provided the local economy, so you need to address that as a wholesome entire ecosystem to bring that transition forward.