Also, the community engagement now to say that these issues are there is, in the face of this, going to be a dramatically different exercise than it would have been while they were receiving their mail at their homes. People are reasonable. They don't want to see their neighbours put in harm's way. Consequently, I think it would have been an entirely different dynamic from the dynamic you're going to probably see now. In the execution of this exercise that we've seen coming and you've seen coming—as you say, you have been dealing with it probably since November, and I know it's been known in my constituency that this was coming—I think action should have been taken so that the discussions that are now going to be taken under some sense of tension, and I can tell you that it is palpable, might have been done much more reasonably and less emotionally before the crisis came upon us, which is what happened on Monday.
I can tell you it's the subject of pretty much everything in greater Fredericton right now, in terms of the fact that people are having to drive.... People are actually having to drive to places within the greater area.... Fredericton is not a large place, but a few are having to drive to places they've never been before in their lives. I'm being called and asked for directions on how to get to places they've been told to go to that are supposed to be convenient pickup points.