I can say a couple of things.
Certainly most developed countries have also prohibited the use of concentrated strychnine as a pest control product now. So Canada wasn't alone.
In 1992, when the decision was made, it was the responsibility of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada.
One of the tools the new act does give--and I certainly can't make a commitment to deal with things that are from 14 to 15 years ago--is going forward, and our new act gives us a tool. The new act has a new definition of value. In re-evaluations, this is one of the situations in which value has been used by our colleagues in the United States to look at the economic impact on a certain sector of the tool and to use it to refine the permitted uses going forward, if you need to restrict use, to make sure you're restricting use to where the product is of high value and that there aren't alternatives.