Yes. The issue is that basically a payment under the AgriStability program is triggered by a drop in the producer's income. Making a dollar payment per head has no bearing on what their actual drop in income may be at the end of the day, because they may have a large grain operation. It's a whole-farm program.
So a producer might have 100 head of cattle and a large grain operation in 2007. If you make a special advance based on $100 a head, they're going to get that money, but at the end of the day they're not going to trigger a payment under the AgriStability program because they haven't had a drop in margin because of the returns on the grain operation. So the producer ends up having to pay that money back. That's just an example of how, at the end of the day, it may not equate to what you'd get from the program.