First of all, there is a letter signed by the national organizations. Our signature is on it; CPEPC—the Canadian Poultry and Egg Processors Council—the Further Poultry Processors Association of Canada, and CARI are on it. There are a number; it's not just those.
There has been an agreement to ask the government to have this rule changed. The proposal would not be to go to 20%. The proposal would be probably to go to somewhere around 40% or 50%, because, as you can imagine, we've had a case already this year in which we had a box come in that was 10 kilos. There were eight kilos, I think it was, of chicken and two kilos of rice. It met the rule. It came into the country tariff-free. You open the box up, take the bag of rice out, throw it aside, and you take the chicken and sell it.
This is why we as an industry clearly understand what's at risk. It's not just farmers not producing chicken, not buying grain, not doing this or that. It's primary processors not putting a product across the line; it's further processors not making the product in its final form.
We are at the very early stages of this, but people are starting to see how they can use this. There is an opportunity to shut the door before this gets out of hand, as it has in the dairy industry. At this point, the government has refused to do it.