Mr. Chair, it's not for me to gloat with great glee across the way at my colleagues from Alberta, but thank you, Ms. George, for that, and thank you very much for the kind words about how all parties actually came together.
I have to admit it was a great joy for those of us who come from wine-growing regions—as I do, from Niagara, along with my colleague Alex from the southern interior of British Columbia—to join with Dan to ensure that we had all-party consent. Of course, Frank and his party did likewise, as did the others.
You've articulated some of the things we can do. I talked to my colleague, the provincial member who actually lives next door to me, in office terms. She just happens to be a New Democrat who agrees with me in how we should do interprovincial wine trade.
Do you see places where legislatively we can deal with this, or is this more of an encouragement piece? I know that a lot of us have tried to find out if there is another piece of federal legislation that has an impact we can work on. Or is it really a question of moral suasion, if you will, of opening up that border so that we really do move wine back and forth?
You spoke, Ms. George, about putting a case of wine in your car and driving back from B.C. My wife and I would probably get as far as Lloydminster and there wouldn't be anything in the case. We'd never get back to Ontario. It might have been illegal for me to drink it, since I'm not a resident of Alberta and I might have been arrested before I got to Saskatchewan.