Okay.
The country of origin and U.S. dumping, which it ties into as well, are the two major problems. For the country of origin, I don't think it's the job of the organizations to do this. The guy that can document where products are coming from is the member for this particular riding, Stockwell Day. He's in charge of the Canada Border Services Agency, and all he needs to do is put together a directive. They know everything that comes across that border, so maybe we should tell him to do so, and that would give us an indication.
On the country of origin side, which deals with the whole issue of value-added, you mentioned the apples, and there are all kinds of other cases.
On the dumping side, the problem there, Greg, is that the trade remedy laws are so slow. John, you've had experience previously with potatoes and other crops, and I know Greg has as well. How do we speed up the trade remedy laws so that they kick in by the time...? In your case, it's a three-week period, and it's all over. One day's dumping into the market will kill the price for the next month.
Do you have any suggestions in that area? Any of you can go ahead.