It's a companion program.
There are several fronts in the business risk management, or BRM, suite of programming. Agri-invest, where farmers put in 1% of their net and we match it—they can put in any amount they want, but we only match the first 1%—gives them money for a rainy day to take out the small bumps and hurdles as they move forward. Most farmers look at that as a retirement program as opposed to levelling out the small bumps. The trick with that is we've changed the trigger. It's much more user friendly than it used be. Then you have agri-stability, which is one of the major programs. It's driven by market interruptions or weather-related issues that aren't covered by crop insurance. Crop insurance is the mainstay for most people. There never was an insuranced-based product for livestock, but now we have one under the agri-insurance envelope. Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia have endorsed, as I said, about a million head covered to a value of about $1.7 billion. Manitoba is looking at one for hogs, based more on a hedging guarantee, and we're looking at how we implement that as well. So everybody's—