No, there's been very good progress with industry in terms of responding to the issue around a dedicated surveillance program in Canada for avian influenza. The discussions on compensation have been going on in parallel with those discussions. We have come to ground with the industry on a surveillance approach that will meet the obligations our trading partners and, I believe, Canadians would expect of our industry in identifying any potential public health risk associated with avian influenza. The compensation issues have been going in parallel with that and with the efforts of the department to assess the viability of AgriRecovery and other programming to assist them in that area while at the same time working with the industry, as was recently demonstrated by the sheep sector in Ontario.
A pilot has been undertaken by Deborah Whale and the group in Ontario to look at a co-insurance policy, which brings into private insurance a capacity for the poultry industry as well. We think the sheep model has significant merit in Canada in terms of both mitigating the impact on the producer and at the same time recognizing both public and private good.