Thank you, gentlemen, for being here.
Mr. Swan, you talked about market development and trade and the importance of a domestic market. I'd like to pursue that.
In British Columbia, one of the topics that was brought up was our food security as a nation. So I'd like to throw that out for everybody on the panel to get some idea of how we can expand our domestic market in other areas besides just the supply management sector, and how that fits in with our food security and rural development and with the infrastructure of your two priorities, Mr. Martin.
Does that mean there's a role for railways? Does it mean we have to bring back a concept of the small or family farm as opposed to the large enterprise?
If we have some time, I'd also like to talk a bit about disaster relief, but perhaps we could just start and get a couple of comments from each of you gentlemen.