Thank you.
Before we move on to the last round, Steve, I have just one thing. I think you and I have discussed this before.
It's the issue with provinces such as Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Quebec. The only way the federal government can get in.... For example, if they're going to give you $100 a head, even though the Alberta government is already giving their beef farmers $100 a head, as a national government we're still bound to do so too. If you could get a commitment from Quebec, Alberta, and Saskatchewan to withdraw their programs and have the government do it, then everybody would be treated the same.
But we don't have the mandate as a federal government to tell them not to do that; they would have to do it willingly. The bottom line is that if the federal government gives everybody, whether in the beef, hog, or sheep industry, or whatever, a certain amount of money, they have to give the producer the same thing no matter where he lives in Canada. At the end of the day, unless the provinces back off from doing what they're doing, you still end up with those inequities.
I farm and you farm here in Ontario. I've always thought, and you've heard me say it before, that this is why, when it comes down to it, the only body that can alleviate that inequity is the province, which has to step up to the plate—unless you can get the other provinces to back off and let it be run as a national program.