I think there's been a series of regulations and legislation that have been reviewed and overhauled since the removal of the monopoly on the CWB. I think that over the past two years governments have done a good job, an admirable job, of creating a private sector marketplace where the industry can flourish, from farmer all the way through to the end processor.
The challenge we have is in the federal and provincial jurisdictions not having clarity on who actually should be regulating in some of these areas. From our perspective, the federal government has the clear mandate to regulate food, feed, and environmental safety matters through the PMRA, Health Canada's food directorate, the CFIA, and the Canadian Grain Commission.
We find it extraordinarily unhelpful for perception and sometimes politically driven regulations to be put into place by the provinces. You remove the opportunity to do that by having an agreement between provinces and the federal government to not do that. The aim of our appearance here today is to really drive home the fact that if you have an agreement in place between the provinces and the federal government to abide by these federal regulatory approvals on the safety of these products, then you remove the possibility that future generations of governments will see fit to drive home regulation that's perception based.