Essentially, what we had was this rear impact guard standard to meet. It was going to require a very large test rig, and the testing requirement was significant and substantially different from what the U.S. equivalent guard was. So we gathered together all the trailer members who would be affected by this new rule and said, okay, here we are and we need to do this. They said, okay, yes, let's go out and get a few quotes. We ended up working with the National Research Council to develop a test procedure and the actual guard designs, which were quite as generic in nature as made sense and would cover 90%-plus of the actual population where these guards would be required. They gave us a quote. We went back to membership and said, okay, it's going to cost in this case about $300-some-odd thousand.
So we're going to need x number of dollars from each of these stakeholders. And anybody else who wanted to buy in would have to pay in that amount. So we acted as the contractor, so to speak, to pull that together.