Good.
Let's seek Carol and Lynne here to talk about cooperatives. I've always felt that cooperatives in rural Canada have a major role to play, especially in agriculture. Often we talk about it from the marketing side, the retail side, but there are a few smaller cooperatives that are out there to buy agricultural inputs. I believe that farmers want to really capitalize on the opportunity to buy in volume and get better deals. If you look at the disparity happening right now in fertilizer in Canada, especially in western Canada, versus the U.S. on Canadian-made fertilizer—they can buy it down there quite a bit cheaper—I think there's a real role for them to play.
When farmers want to look at offsetting some of the concentration that's happening in the industry to empower themselves—we always talk about integration—instead of being top-down, this is a chance to be from the bottom up, if you want to integrate from the producer level.
Does the Co-operatives Association have an active recruitment program on the ground for producers? If they contact you for information on how to form a co-op, what types of co-ops do they want to form? New Generation Co-ops is something that is available in some provinces. I was just wondering if you provide those types of consultations to producers.