One of your colleagues asked why it takes so long to do things federally, and I couldn't give him a precise answer. In this case, I can give you a fairly clear answer: getting 14 governments to agree is a pretty massive challenge.
We have some good examples of how they do it elsewhere, though, that we think are worthy of looking at. The Australians have developed a system that has now been in use for not quite a decade, whereby they have an agreement amongst their Commonwealth government and the states and territories on a mechanism for making decisions that impact both on the commodities and on the products that are dealt with in the federal jurisdiction and in the provincial—or there, the state—and territorial jurisdiction.
It's something that we could look at here and provide a mechanism for. One of the challenges we have is that in some provinces it's the Ministry of Agriculture that's responsible. In some provinces, it's the Ministry of Health that's responsible. We don't very often get those ministers talking together nationally. We can look at some of those opportunities and move them ahead. Some of the provinces have modernized their food safety legislation. They may not yet have gone as far as the rest of the world has gone, but from what tools are available to them, they've moved ahead of what's in the Food and Drugs Act.