We strongly believe in the Canadian Council. I was lucky to be able to travel a bit around the world. I have been to New Zealand; we talked about that earlier. We have been to the U.S. We have been around a little and we have met with people all over the place.
We are going to improve sustainable practices and healthy competition between businesses by investing in farmers, knowledge, expertise, training, and easy and quick access to data.
Through our website, we are trying to provide farmers with information quickly, at a glance or just two or three clicks away. As a result, they can make informed decisions and they can find budgets and resources that will help them on a daily basis.
If you teach people how to fish, you don't need to keep feeding them. If you ask me how we can make improvements, I will tell you that more work needs to be done on prevention rather than on corrective measures. But I don't suggest we get rid of safety nets and programs.
The more we help producers become aware of their decisions and make informed decisions, the less it is going to cost the government to overcome a crisis, because they are going to be better prepared for it, whether with a fiscal reserve or something else. They might see the blow coming more in advance.
That is what we think. We have to invest in long-term training.