Yes. On what happened in the north, there was some log loading being done, and it was being done by the Nisga'a tribe. They set up their own corporation to load logs. We went in there and signed an accord with them. We've done this in the past with Bella Coola and Bella Bella.
We went in there and signed them up to the BCMEA-ILWU collective agreement. It was an agreement that they would work under the terms and condition of the ILWU-BCMEA collective agreement and earn the same money that people in the Lower Mainland were earning. We sent up trainers, who trained them on how to operate the cranes and how to load the logs safely and properly. We just do monitoring on their training. All the rest of that work is done by the Nisga'a.
In Bella Coola, we sent in trainers. Some were topside--the crane operators. The rest of the work was distributed by the band council. They picked people. There's no use in just taking a whole bunch of people and saying, “Here, go load logs”. It's a very dangerous job, right? You have to be trained in how to do it properly, safely, and efficiently. If you're not efficient, people aren't going to come back and load them. So that's what we did.
Under our conditions... Mr. Vurdela refers to benefits of about 40%, so what happened in that case, because the Nisga'a didn't require the benefits under the collective agreement, was that the money was set aside in a fund. Every few years, they come forward with a project and approach the BCMEA and the ILWU jointly to access those funds to buy an MRI or to put a roof on a sports complex or something like that. Dollar for dollar, they earn the same money that is earned by people who are longshoring on the B.C. coast, on the Lower Mainland or anywhere else.