As part of the grains innovation round table, which was started several years ago, we actually had a group working on low-level presence. We hired a consultant who went through all of the federal acts and regulations to determine how many acts in Parliament would actually touch something like this. And if you want to change this, there's a substantial amount of work to be done.
Through that, there was the Canola Council of Canada and the cereal grain people and soybean people, and a wide sector of the crop growers in Canada. We all worked together on this low-level presence. We've done a huge amount of work, and we actually have a bit of a draft as to what we would want to see happen.
We also understand the government has started working on that as well. We're going to be sitting down together in about two weeks, I believe, in Winnipeg, at the Canada Grains Council meeting. We're going to be sitting down and comparing notes so the government doesn't get too far ahead of what we want.
That process is moving down a road where there's been good respect on both side as to what we need. But we don't want government to get too far ahead of us, in case they go somewhere else.