Thank you, Chair.
Thank you, folks, for coming. If there's one thing that I think Saskatchewan is well recognized for, it is the Innovation Place, the cluster, with the competitors actually cooperating together to move ahead. It is absolutely amazing what we've seen in that area from out here.
Randy asked this question as well, in a sense. One of the problems.... I believe it was Mary who said that biotech is far more than GMOs, but that is an issue that we're just not getting around. We aren't.
As was mentioned around the table several times, Bill C-474 is up for a vote this week. Since I put word out yesterday, I can tell you this morning that we'll be recommending that at least my colleagues vote against the bill. I'm getting a lot of not very friendly mail, but it isn't a bill that does what its regulatory intent was.
At any rate, we have to get around the idea that biotech isn't just GMOs and get to all the other good things it does. Personally, I think there are good GMOs and bad GMOs. I think the science of each has to be looked at on its merits. How do we do that? Am I right in saying that biotech is not just GMOs? How do we do that?
Bert, I think you were suggesting earlier that there was a need for a biological solution to improve quality and nutrition, etc. There are a lot of different areas we can go into. Good research needs to be done in organics, good research needs to be done in natural solutions, good research needs to be done in biotechnology and even in GMOs, but how are we going to get people to understand the positives of it all? It's starting to be a war out there, from what I'm seeing. We're only going to hurt ourselves as a country and hurt our ability to progress, and even hurt, as Brad said earlier, people down on the farm.
How do we overcome it?