 I regard this as a significant day for the people of this province and an important moment. It was a day where we decided that we are committed to working together for the betterment of the citizens of our province, for a more prosperous future, for a brighter future for them and for their children. And we in British Columbia have a generational opportunity ahead of us in terms of liquefied natural gas and securing that opportunity. This is a moment where I believe an important dialogue started here today and that we're committed to continuing that dialogue and to finding real answers that put British Columbians to work at decent-paying jobs with the skills they need. The offer has been made by the government, we've accepted that, that we will be equal partners in this. And I think that's very important for us, is that we're equal partners with the employers, unions and government, together we will fix this problem. On behalf of the BC Building Trades, I want to thank the Premier for initiating the dialogue. It's very important that we are at the point where we need to start training up British Columbians for the jobs that are coming. We know that with liquefied natural gas proposals that will be taking place probably in about four or five years, we have an opportunity right now to start training young British Columbians who want to get into the skilled trades. We all have the same interests at heart here. And that's making sure that British Columbians are working. Making sure that British Columbians are first in line for those jobs. And so we need to put aside our differences and get to work. As Jim said, starting a dialogue where we can work cooperatively on solving those problems together, because people don't care about politics. They care about jobs. And what we decided today is that we are going to put jobs first, put it ahead of politics. And this is the beginning, I hope, of a very fruitful dialogue between all the parties that have an interest in solving this complex problem.