Well, it varies. For one thing, entry-level training has different requirements in each province, but on average, as Mike mentioned, to get your commercial driver's licence, it's around 100 to 110 hours.
Then there's an onboarding program. Once that individual has their commercial driver's licence, then each employer has their own onboarding finishing program, which is endorsed by whichever insurer they're using. Those vary from four weeks to six weeks, and some of them even go for as long as three months. What we want to do is get some consistency around that occupational-level training.
When I say those times vary, we also need to keep in mind that there are some fleets that do no onboarding or finishing programs. They allow an individual with a commercial driver's licence to get working, and that's obviously a concern. This is why we want to look at getting consistency on what that occupational-level training could look like, so that it's the same across the board and insurance buys into it.
The other factor I will mention is that this onboarding varies from company to company, so if you work at one company and you've done their finishing and onboarding program, when you move to another company, you are back at square one. That's the other concern, because that has a direct impact on productivity.