 In our preliminary economic assessment, which we completed last spring, we looked at say a $3 copper price over the 22-year mine life, we'd be spending about $1 billion in taxes. That's just direct taxes from the mine to the two levels of government. It doesn't include payroll taxes. It doesn't include all the spin-off businesses and support businesses in the region of the mine. And typically for every job created at a mine, there's three jobs created in the surrounding area. So if we look at a billion dollars from our one project at a conservative metal price forecast, and then our Premier Christy Clarke said she expects there to be eight new mines by 2015 in the province, you can see how this would have a major impact on the province's economy and the tax revenue, and therefore the ability to provide social services across the province. It really is a game changer. The government needs is the people of the province needed to support social services because the forest industry has clearly been knocked down and hasn't come back.