My understanding is that CN.... Well, initially the creek was frozen, and they did have volunteers—just volunteers from the town, partly, and some from CN—to pick it off the surface of the creek. The second concern of the consultants for CN who came in was just to get the line open again and get trains moving, so all of these huge piles of coal sat there. In fact, they sat there for three or four weeks before CN came back and attempted to load the coal into cars and take it away. They got quite a bit of it, but approximately a tonne of high-selenium coal was left on the edge of the tracks, on the base of the creek and in the creek, and they thought that was a good cleanup.
The creek had a group that had worked very hard on salmon enhancement and in fact had a large run of nice big salmon coming into the creek. They had built a fence and were counting them every year, so they knew their numbers. Needless to say, I guess, for the numbers for the next year—this is an approximation—instead of over 300, there were 72. Subsequent years have.... It's questionable that this run will ever come back the way it did, and I assume that may be because of ongoing contamination to the area.