Mark, it's good to see you again. I hope seeding is going well. The bees are good this year, I understand. They're growing back, and it's not a problem at all. I'll get to you at the end if I have time, because I know that my colleague, Mr. Van Kesteren, did a great job of questioning you and finding out your views.
I do want to start with Troy Lundblad, if you don't mind. You made a couple of comments about dumping, and it's all about China. Well, China's not part of the TPP. There seems to be a lot of misinformation out there on the World Wide Web that somehow China's the fly in the ointment here. They're not in the TPP, and they really probably will never get into the TPP because of the environmental and labour standard chapters. They'd never measure up. Whether we go there on a free trade agreement bilaterally, or not, is something for the future, I think. So, that's off the table.
Having worked in construction with equipment and so on, to pay for my nasty farming habit, the one thing I see as very beneficial is labour mobility. I know you guys are quite concerned that we're going to have a flood of unqualified workers come into Canada. I don't see that happening because there are safeguards for that. Certainly when I look at global Canadian companies like SNC-Lavalin, as they get out there in the world marketplace, in TPP countries there is all kinds of qualified work for operating engineers—which is what I was—and welders and machinists and engineers, and so on. Would you not agree that there is reciprocity, that we could actually benefit from some of those chapters?