British Columbia has a successful and a vibrant wine industry.
When we did the FTA and the NAFTA, the Government of Canada and the Government of British Columbia put some measures in place to assist the domestic wine industry in British Columbia to change its game, improve itself, and become competitive. Most of those measures were supposed to last seven, eight, or eleven years, the typical thing you see when we sign trade agreements to give your own domestic industry a chance to make changes to be able to compete.
Here we are, almost 30 or 35 years later, not only are those things still in place but they've been added to dramatically. These are not nascent industries anymore. These are successful, competitive businesses. By continuing to load different kinds of advantages onto them in their local marketplace, that damages people who try to go into British Columbia, for example, and compete and try to win consumers' attention. We don't have distilleries in British Columbia. They have a wine industry so they are very focused on the wine industry.