Thank you, Chair.
Thanks, folks, for coming.
Mr. Tully and Mr. Huard, clearly you're of a scale that is extremely large in comparison to most co-ops many of us would be familiar with, especially in the eastern part of the country, where there aren't nearly as many folks, especially the vertical integration you talked about earlier, especially on the fuel side. I just wish some of our private sector refineries in the province of Ontario had decided to take your longer view and kept them open and expanded them, rather than winding them down and closing them.
Perhaps when you are finished with this particular piece and are successful, as I have no doubt you will be, you may want to gaze over your shoulder to us poor folks in the east and come help us with that refinery capacity and send that stuff east. It would be extremely welcome, to say the least, especially to somebody like me, who's been a co-op member and a credit union member all my entire life, basically.
Mr. Tully, earlier you talked a little bit about leadership, and I know Mr. Preston asked you a couple of questions. I want to talk more on the governance side, because I believe that's where you said you come from.
My sense is the difference between the governance model of a co-op versus a shareholder investor, which has a board of directors, is the board of directors in that group tends to be invited—sometimes they're voted, but they tend to be invited—and then shareholders are supposed to vote on it. I get those things in the mail. I usually never send them back, so proxy somebody's forming, no doubt. We actually have direct elections for those, and I'm sure your co-op's the same.
Can you talk to me just a tiny bit about the really important factor of how that leadership development program that you have instils in those directors, who are ultimately owners, and how it reinforces their sense of why they should be owners and continue to spread that message that it's a great thing to be in a co-op?