Not the general public, obviously, but we've asked first responders, the fire chief in Surrey or in Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, to turn to the mayor and ask the mayor, “Who should have access to this in order to prepare a first responders' intervention?” Often it will be some councillors who sit on public security committees. The mayors themselves in Quebec must have it because ultimately they're responsible for their first responders, but also the local community more broadly.
If you have a citizen sitting on a public safety committee, he'll have access to it, but what you don't want, obviously, is some third party saying how many cars a week of propane will go by this crossing when they're not really involved with the first responders.
That's your answer. Towns will decide, based on the use of that information, who should have access to it. But I want to be clear; it's not access to the general public because that would go beyond what needs to be done to make sure we're ready for a first responder intervention.