I apologize for that. They didn't have one to fit me.
Again, I thank the committee very much for coming to Stratford and to this part of southwestern Ontario for this very important meeting.
I feel a little foreign sitting here, as I chair the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage. I just have to watch the clock lots of times, and I don't really have the opportunity to ask too many questions. But I do know that in my riding, in Perth—Wellington, supply management is a very important part of the agriculture.
I also know that grains and oilseeds are very important, and I also realize that CAIS has not worked. It has worked somewhat for the hog industry. There are some good things and bad things.
One thing I keep hearing about is the amount of paperwork that has to be done. I think it was Ed who mentioned this morning again that these programs weren't necessarily put out to help accountants do very well; they were to get that money to the farm gate.
What do you think, other than maybe a one-pager or a two-pager to apply to some of these things? How can some of that be streamlined to help make sure that the bulk of the funds that are set out for farmers do get into the farmers' hands?