Thank you, Alex. We'll get you those numbers. It's not a problem. Some of the programs didn't exist in some of those years, but we'll give you what we've got.
I'm trying to go in the order you gave them to me.
The CGC is a modernization situation. It hasn't been done for decades. I would categorize that press release as mischievous, at best. It doesn't give you the full picture. I would like to think that the CGC actually delivers for producers. Producer groups are excited and thrilled about the changes that are proposed--barring one, I guess. Having said that, the vast majority of producers in western Canada, and across Ontario, where there's a bit of overview from the CGC, are asking for these changes. They've wanted them for quite some time.
As to the funding, we're talking about the main estimates only with that. Historically the funding for the CGC has been done through the supplementaries as the programs are outlined and we see what kind of market reaction there is, how much test we need and so forth. And that will continue to be that way.
When it comes to producers' costs being driven up, I don't understand how that will happen. The biggest change from a controversial standpoint--again producers are saying this is great--is the whole idea that somehow everyone you deliver product to is insured to the point to cover you off; you know, should they not be able to carry forward they go into a bankruptcy.
Historically we've seen that program deliver pennies on the dollar. It's a false sense of security to producers that Joe Blow's grain supply can pay for the product they bought from you today when they go bankrupt tomorrow or last month or whatever. There's no way to track. Grain commodities are very flexible and very movable. One week they'll do 500,000 tonnes of wheat, and the next week none. So you catch them on the week when they...and their bond doesn't cover that expansion and contraction in a fulsome enough way. I'm not sure how you would regulate that. There are instances in the private sector that do a better job of tracking that than government has. I guess that's what we're trying to encapsulate here.
Of course, any bill that comes before the House will come to this committee, and amendments are possible. If you see there's a better way--a better way to build a better mousetrap--and producers decide that's the way they want to go, then that's what we'll put into the bill. It is a work-in-process.
I know you had Elwin Hermanson, the chief commissioner, here on Tuesday, and some of these questions were asked of him. I think he gave great answers, in the responses I saw when I took a quick look at the transcripts. Certainly we're moving forward, with farmers in control of the Grain Commission working in the best interests of producers. That's as succinct as I can be.
On COOL, we're ramping up our responses to that. The vote was finally taken yesterday. The possibility of a presidential veto is no longer on the table. With any vote that surpasses the two-thirds majority mark, the veto is then off the table and not in play. The vote was almost 75% in favour of moving forward with the Farm Bill.
The devil is in the details. I've had these discussions with the last two secretaries of agriculture and, to a short extent, Mike Johanns, when he was there. We have let them know in no uncertain terms that if this thickens the border in any way at all.... We have already seen contracts, on weanling pigs out of Manitoba, that have been reneged on because the buyer on the American side isn't sure what kind of label he's going to have to put on that product.
There's so much product that is born on one side of the line, fed on another side, and processed back again. Whose is it? If you had to have a passport for these cattle, or hogs for that matter, going back and forth, it would be stamped quite a few times.
I was in Washington some time ago, and the American industry itself isn't for this either. They're saying it will take four to five different labels to cover off what they think may be coming in COOL. They want no part of it. The government side assures me that this will go through, but they have no way to enforce it. The problem is that it creates the frustration and angst on this side. How do we deliver it?
That's the nature of a NAFTA panel. It is going to distort the marketplace from the Canadian side in a negative way, as we grapple with how we label this product that goes back and forth. I think part of the answer is in our own labelling systems, where we get a better idea on “Product of Canada”. We're working hard on that one.
I know my time is up