Thank you.
Thank you, folks.
Really, in one way or another, all of you mentioned the Canadian Wheat Board. Rob, maybe you said it best when you said the Canadian Wheat Board actually balances the system in terms of the powerful players out there, as opposed to the tens of thousands of grain producers up against the international grain trade and the railways.
Avery, you were vice-president of Saskatchewan Wheat Pool at one time, and when you were vice-president, the pools really worked in the farmers' interest. I spent years out there in western Canada, and I absolutely found it amazing how powerful those pools were. Now they really operate in the interests of their shareholders, who may be in New York or Toronto or elsewhere around the world. So at one time, where you did have allies in terms of your own pools that were working in your interest, to a great extent now they're just grain companies. They're out to make a buck for their shareholders, which I think comes to the point of the Wheat Board and this task force report that we heard some more about today: no evidence, no documentation.
Do you really think the answer is as the task force recommends, that what Canadian prairie farmers really need is another grain company?