From our perspective, crop insurance has probably always been the mainstay of our safety net programming. We've really tried to do a good job of listening to what is needed and further develop it. I think that has been a big factor. Keep it affordable, keep it so that you have individual productivity indexes, so that it's dealing with the issues of individual producers, and that kind of thing.
As to whether it should be a model for a national program, I would probably say no, because of the fact that each individual province has its own issues. It comes back to the flexibility issue. I think each province needs to design a program that's going to work for them, and they have to do that on their own—watching the other provinces, of course, in terms of the kinds of innovations they're doing, and that kind of thing. But they still have to do it on their own, as a basis for how it's going to serve their producers.