Let me respond to your first question, which was on the reasons students are not selecting agriculture as a choice of study. If you have, as I do, a son or daughter in grade 12, and they say they're going to go into agriculture at the University of Manitoba or Saskatoon, it's not sexy. Media and public perception has really moved their goals away from agriculture, because there's absolutely nothing neat about it in the way it's presented to our youth.
Second, we suffer from an image. To many people, young and old, agriculture is simply farming. The fact that there are international careers in trade, economics, and processing, all as a part of the training we offer in our faculties, is not known by the general public and is not known by our educators at the high school level; consequently, it is not information that our students have available to them when they're making these important decisions.
In terms of immigration, that is a very good question. I can tell you that industries are now actively recruiting from other countries to find the labour they need in production and in processing facilities.