I was seeing if that was the kind of example that was out there. Like I said, I'm not an expert. You make assumptions. There are probably a lot of products kicking around day to day that you just don't realize are coming from Canadian forests.
Mr. Irving, you were talking about the importance of training in one of your recommendations. We see some of those existing investments, and I'm speaking again from a northern context. Our Red Seal trade programs are working very well. We've invested in the underground mining training program, Centre for Northern Innovation in Mining, up in the Yukon. That's a good model, supported and then funded by the Government of Canada.
Is that the kind of idea you're thinking about in terms of recommendations to the federal government coming in with industry-paired support? I guess one of the challenges is that training investment should also dovetail nicely with the available jobs in the market.
In that vein, what are the job prospects now? Are there lots of open and available jobs? Is that something where governments would say there's a major gap? If we just support the skills shortage in this field, we could take tremendous advantage of that through either colleges or industry training.