There are a couple of steps to it. There is a second parcel, I'm told, that is close to having the R designation removed—within weeks. The process is that if there have been actual undertakings on the site, for instance buildings or storage of contaminated materials, we have to do a joint inspection with the Inuvialuit Land Corporation of the site, develop a jointly agreed remediation plan, then carry out the remediation plan, and then jointly inspect the property at the end of that.
You can appreciate that the geography we're talking about here has a very narrow season, because you don't generally do this kind of remediation with snow on the ground. There's a very narrow period of time to do the inspections required and the remediation work. It takes rather longer than we would like, but the Inuvialuit have asked me to make this a point of real priority over the last year, and that's led us to refine the process to see that to use a quitclaim process and remove our designation actually works.
So I'm pleased with the progress. It's taken longer than we would like, but it's showing results.