Could I perhaps add to that answer?
The province is very involved. Obviously a province like Ontario is very involved in nuclear, nuclear safety, and nuclear emergency planning. It constitutes a large part of what Emergency Management Ontario does, because they recognize the risk versus if something really does happen.
They work very closely with the regulatory agency. They consult on a regular basis on all matters, including the matters that we earlier described, the physical safety, etc. When it comes to the community, Emergency Management Ontario works very closely with the community on early warning systems, distribution of KI pills, all of the evacuation procedures, etc. Those are mandated within those areas, and the municipal plans in those areas have to be up to a higher standard because of the existence of nuclear reactors. The province, in approving those municipal plans, works with those municipalities to ensure that those elements are in fact done. The province holds the role of what happens outside the gate and the operator looks after what happens inside the gate. That's the way we generally think of things.
In addition, if a province like Ontario had concerns about the emergency planning, they would make those known and do make them known. They go to all of the hearings and they participate actively in all of the hearings as well. So there are a number of ways in which this comes in not just through the operator but in fact through the province.