Right now, you have a system where you deliver to an elevator in that particular system, where it's weighed and verified. You can submit a sample. If you have a concern about the grade that's being issued at that particular elevator, you can in fact send that sample to the Canadian Grain Commission, and they will look at it and determine whether it is in fact the grade, the dockage, or whatever. So you have some sort of verification.
That's for the protection of the producer. It's also for the protection of the guy who's buying your grain, so that he can say with all confidence to the next guy, “This is what I'm buying your grain for; this is where it is.” That's important for protection of producers, but also for protection of that grain buyer, that somebody can't say, “Well, no, he told me it was a two, and I have actually sent it away and it's a one.” The other hand is there too to say, “Well, no, I sent it away and it was what I said it was when I graded it.” So it's there for the protection of the industry.