I believe that was true at one time. As I've had someone tell me who used to work in the logging industry, you didn't need grade 12 to go into the woods and cut a cord of pulp and sell. But these days, with technology coming in, you do need grade 12 and beyond to run a harvester in the woods. People got by being illiterate. I have family members who, to this day, are illiterate. I'm not proud to say it by any means, but this is just the way it is. There's a lack of opportunity sometimes.
Also, we try to fast-track so much now that some people do get left behind—I hate to say it but it is very true—and those are the ones who get left behind. At the end of the day, they just don't have the skills. It's been kind of on a back burner, you know, “You'll catch up. You'll catch up.” But you get so frustrated—and I think that kind of speaks to the dropout rates also—and once you get frustrated, you just say, “Okay, listen. That's it. I'm not going any further.”