That's a great connection to the engagement piece, and that's serving a social need as well within the communities. That very much is part of the sustainability formula: the economy and the environment and communities. There are other examples like that. We have some examples of not-for-profits who operate what we call a bottle depot, where you take back your empty beverage containers. They employ disadvantaged citizens to work within the bottle depot.
Those are examples that do exist in a number of circumstances, but they are small in number. I think probably Saskatchewan, not surprisingly, has the largest commitment to that in its network of bottle depots, where they employ exclusively those with disabilities. They have 75 depots that employ exclusively people with disabilities. There are those kinds of natural connections. What we need is to create the chemistry that makes the connection happen. It has to be an organized activity, it's got to be organized under a structure, and that's of course where in fact something like the Cooperatives Act represents that potential structure that will empower those things to occur.