ITAC members are handlers of Canadian Wheat Board grains, in fact, disproportionately so, because for a private terminal without international connections handling Canadian Wheat Board grains—and the Canadian Wheat Board was doing the marketing—you just get paid for handling. It was a good deal.
Now, with a voluntary Canadian Wheat Board, which I don't think is doing nearly as much business as they had hoped to do as a voluntary board, certainly it's a big adjustment for ITAC members. ITAC members are the ones that aren't associated with a larger grain company and haven't gone and hired a bunch of staff to send them overseas to kick tires and find sales. They make deals with other people at agricultural expositions. There are many mid-size and large grain companies and interests that they can access.
In the transition, certainly, there's been a lot of adjusting and a lot of figuring out how it's all going to work. By and large, grain movement through the ITAC facilities has been fine and they seem to be adjusting well. I don't hear a whole lot of complaints about terminal access for the ones that don't have access to their own terminals.
Those commercial agreements seem to be in place. The transition, frankly, has happened with far fewer difficulties than I would have predicted.