 Our union in Canada is attached to the mining industry and the steel industry. You'll probably have seen in the paper in the last couple of days some bosses got convicted and they're sentenced to jail for killing the four people in Toronto off the scaffold. Our union has been running a campaign now since Westray. The Westray disaster that killed 26 people. Those workers called my office while I was national director and I knew some of them from the Elliott Lake days who said Leo the emissions here and the coal dust here is worse we've ever seen. We need a union or else we won't get this cleaned up. I sent an organizer there two days after he got there the mine blew up. 26 workers were killed. No one paid a price even though there was a Royal Commission who said it was the management's decisions. So we started a campaign called stop the killing the Westray bill. It took us 10 years. We got the Westray bill passed federally. It became the law of the land. No one had ever been convicted. We started a program three years ago. We met and run from coast to coast saying if you're willfully neglect and someone gets killed you can be held criminally responsible. We're not interested in putting people in jail per se. We're interested in clean workplaces. And if you have the possibility of facing jail time you probably make sure your workplace is safer and that you take the right measures. So it's a sad reason to be pleased but the fact that these guys got convicted is the first conviction under the Westray bill in 15 years now. And our interest is safe workplace and not putting people in jail but this now sends a signal to everybody and we're not going to stop. We're having meetings with police associations, with coroners, the RCMP, with crown attorneys, with ministers of labor. We're having meetings in communities where we're having community meetings in places because our objective is to get safe workplaces. Workers shouldn't go to work to die or to get sick.