Yes. In fact, just so people know, with the targeted advance the administration estimates what a producer's payment is under the AgriStability program. It actually gives them a letter that has the amount on it and says, “Here are the terms and conditions; if you agree, sign below and send it in to the administration”, and they get a cheque. It's basically almost money in the bank. In fact, I've talked to bankers who have said that with a letter like that, they would put it in the file and use it in terms of supporting operating credit. So it is quite unique, and it was evolved over the last couple of years.
So we're using it for the hog industry. The way it works is the provincial associations, the industries, work with their provincial government and ask us to implement a targeted advance. To date, we haven't had that. The focus seems to be, for the cattle industry, on interim payments, where it's basically a short application form. The producer fills in the numbers and sends it in, and within 30 days of receiving that interim application a payment is issued.
The targeted advance is a little bit more producer friendly. We can give producers a higher percentage of their estimated entitlement, but we have to be careful because it's only in certain circumstances that we actually invoke that, where the crisis is deep enough—like in the hog industry—that we're comfortable issuing a letter to a producer saying you can get a—