In some circumstances we will set what's called an import MRL. Typically that's for a product where the food is not grown in Canada: bananas, oranges, grapefruit. We don't grow them in Canada. There is no need to establish a domestic MRL; it's only an import MRL. There could be examples of older products where we don't permit the use of the pesticide in Canada but they are still being used abroad, and those products are coming in and we're not seeing or detecting the maximum residue limit. So in the scenario you thought of, where we actually have taken action against the pesticides, you can have the issue that they come in and they're not detected. And that's where we always try to work with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency to make sure that their inspection programs are changing and covering those bases.
On January 29th, 2008. See this statement in context.