My question has a provincial flavour to it because we're talking about the LCBO, but on the supply chain I guess I'm looking at it more from the angle of consumer access to your product.
Right now consumers know that if you want to buy spirits, you have to go to the LCBO. If there were another type of distribution chain outside the LCBO, would you expect consumption to go up, or would you simply expect the consumer to say, “Boy, I'm really glad I can go to any store now within a 500-metre distance and not drive two kilometres to the LCBO”?
Do you find that the distribution chain in effect right now is actually inhibiting sales, or are there other factors at play that might be taking sales away? It might be price points. It might be all sorts of things.