When I'm talking about harmonization, I mean accepting U.S. inspection certificates as valid for inspections done at the plant. I understand that you're saying there's a risk associated with car tires, perhaps, but I would imagine that the occurrence of that is probably fairly low.
I want to ask another question about harmonization. One of my colleagues asked about harmonization between federal and provincial responsibilities and the impact this would have on inspectors. In certain provinces--Manitoba, Saskatchewan, B.C.--we are actually, I guess, relegating back to the provinces responsibility for inspecting their own provincial slaughterhouses. What that means is that the federal inspectors won't be doing it any more, which could ultimately mean that we won't need the inspectors who were doing those specific jobs. It has been relegated back to the provinces. Perhaps they will increase their inspection forces, but there will be a decrease, perhaps, in the number of federal inspectors. You might criticize that as a decrease and say that the health of Canadians is at risk, but actually it just makes good sense. Why is the federal government inspecting provincial slaughterhouses?
I want to ask you about that, because some of these decreases you might be worried about could probably be very well explained by things like that. What do you think about that?