I think the Canadian Grain Commission with the grain research laboratory, etc. is a very low-cost institution. It has an annual budget of about $80 million. Up until this year, about $25 million was contributed by the federal government. The function of the grain research laboratory is extremely important to the Canadian Grain Commission and the country in the determination of grades, quality factors, and ultimately the end-use quality of grains. Critical in all of this is if you hive off pieces of the Canadian Grain Commission to other areas like Agriculture Canada, then it's also subjected to those same cutbacks, etc., and you risk losing it entirely. This is critical.
Critical to the Canadian Grain Commission's is that mandate, in the interest of the grain producers. That grain research laboratory, all of those pieces, are fulfilling that mandate. What the grain producers do is in the public interest. If we benefit economically, it gets spread throughout the country. The Canadian Grain Commission should be financed by tax dollars, at least a portion of it, because it's for the public good.