 The reason we're here is because yesterday voters got started receiving their HST ballots in the mail from elections BC and I've heard that some people have said they are confused about some of the language in the question and what a yes or a no vote will mean. So today we're here to help if we can clear up a little bit of the confusion around that. You can mark no on your ballot if you want lower taxes and a 10% HST. Or you can vote yes for higher taxes and a 12% PST GST. None of us want to pay back the $1.6 billion to the federal government. We want to keep that money here in British Columbia. And none of us want to create a $3 billion hole in our budget, a budget that goes to pay for healthcare and education for kids all across the province. With the HST families in British Columbia will indeed be better off. It will mean about $120 more in every family's pocket after the HST reductions have gone into place than we would have under the system that the NDP are advocating. The math is very, very simple. British Columbians have a choice between a 10% HST and a 12% PST GST. I would encourage all British Columbians to go to the website and find out more about this as we make a decision about how we're going to cast our ballot. It's www.hstnbc.ca and then make a decision for yourself. For me, I'm going to be voting no to higher taxes. I hope that British Columbians on the whole will agree with me in that. I'd sure rather pay a 10% HST than a 12% GST PST. But British Columbians have the chance to be their own finance minister and make that decision for themselves.