All right. We'll have a look at this in the blues and go from there.
The implications of this are really serious. Mr. Tudor Price answered earlier that the quotas managed by stakeholders along lines of predicted domestic market—those weren't your exact words—and dairy consumption around the world are going down. But in this instance in Canada, you really have to consider the impact of the amount of domestic production that is being displaced by MPCs, which goes against the original intent—which I asked about earlier—of the supply management system stopping milk per se, so that we would know what would be coming into the domestic market and manage our supply accordingly.
Now, we're seeing it being broken down and re-established again—and we can get into a technical argument on whether CFIA is right or wrong—but the fact of the matter is that Canadian dairy farmers are being much harder put by than farmers in other countries, because their domestic market is being displaced in a number of ways. One, it's declining, and two, other product is really getting around the system by coming in this way.
Mr. Bellavance said earlier that there needed to be political will, and the response was that you had outlined the implications of MPCs to ministers. Can you table before us what you said those implications would be on the various options that government may take? Or is that just privy to ministers?