Well, a lot of the tools are in place. Regardless of whether there's a marketing board, a lot of the tools are in place to stop the dumping. You've made the agreements. We just don't have a mechanism there, such as AgriStability. It's $300,000 to get an anti-dump in place that won't be in place until after the season is over. Those are the issues. The government has policies in place to help us with that; they're just not timely. The ship is too big. There needs to be a mechanism put in place to say, “Okay, it's a no-brainer. Washington State has a massive crop this year. There is going to be dumping. Therefore, we're going to be proactively putting an anti-dump in place.”
I don't remember what year, but when I was involved in the industry before, the industry went ahead to try to get an anti-dump, and even though the Americans didn't counter it, we weren't give it. If that's the level of support we're getting from our government, with tools they've already put in place, then the rest of this stuff is redundant.