Thank you, Mr. Chair. I will be sharing my time with Mr. Miller.
I would like to thank our witnesses for being here today. Like Mr. Bellavance, I am pleased to see that we are all on the same page.
It has been a very interesting meeting so far, and I thank you for your presentations.
When we look at a problem, I think it is important that we start with the facts, and I'd like to make a couple of statements. One is that our food supply is increasingly becoming global in nature. At one time, a hundred years ago, of course, it was an all-Canadian food supply. Now we're into a global market, and consumers want a clear indication of what's in the can, in the package, and where it came from.
The other thing I'd like to say is that the new global supply chains have fundamentally changed the way in which food is processed, delivered, etc. Some of you mentioned fish coming from wherever, being partially processed in China, and then coming on over to Canada. I think everybody sort of agrees with those two facts.
The other thing I seem to be hearing from everyone is that if Canadians are given the opportunity, by and large the majority of them will choose to support Canadian agriculture. I see some heads nodding. That would be the general impression. The other thing that seems to be apparent is that this has been an ongoing problem for some years. We have experienced that this is not a recent phenomenon. It has been going on for 10 or 15 years. For whatever reasons, there seems to be some optimism now. Mr. Robertson, Mr. Friesen, and maybe Mr. Laforge all indicated that it's nice to see some movement on this. There again, there is reason for optimism.
We can't go back. We can't figure out why the former government chose not to react when this phenomenon first happened. Obviously, we have reached the point now that we have to do something about it.
One of the things that should encourage all of us, including you people here who are producers, is the Prime Minister's announcement in December of Canada's food and consumer safety action plan. There is $113 million there. It's not all dedicated to this, but a good portion of it is to regulate this problem. So we're moving ahead now.
The other thing that we should take some comfort in is the fact that our minister is listening. Many of you said the minister seems to be listening and you have the ear of the minister. This is the way this minister operates. He goes out and finds out what the problem is, finds out from the—