First of all, the Ontario terminal is an Ontario government project. It was built in the late 1950s. It was built by the Ontario government. It is managed by a board of directors appointed by that government. You can either rent space in hard walls and display your product there, or you can be part of a huge farmers market in the main parking lot. It ebbs and flows, but it goes all winter long. It's a pretty interesting thing to do.
The way it works is that in the middle of the night, product is brought in by various brokers or by primary producers themselves. The buying starts at 3 a.m. It's an interesting thing, and if anybody wants to come down, I'd be happy to take you. They buy their allotted product, they fill their tractor-trailers up, and they're in their stores later on that day.
This has gone so far, sir, that at the current time we have stores in Newfoundland buying out of that terminal. They have a buyer on contract who buys the product, and it goes to Newfoundland three days a week. We have them in Thunder Bay. That's the impact of that terminal.
Where else would you have the volume? To my mind, in Canada there would be only two other places: Montreal and Vancouver.