I know; it doesn't happen often, right?
Madam Fowlie, you talked a little bit, when you started in on your discussion, about some of the good things that have happened that allow your industry to work better, frankly, with plant breeders' rights, standardization of containers. I know that issue was resisted for a long time, but it had to happen eventually. It still may not all be phased in, but it's coming.
The issue that I look at in your business on interprovincial trade—we had the head of the Ontario horticultural sector here last Tuesday and he talked about it—is really what we would call in international trade “anti-dumping”, whereby, if another province has a surplus, that surplus suddenly gets sold in the food exchange in Montreal or Toronto or Calgary or wherever and causes that market to be flooded and depresses the prices that the growers are able to get, because there's no network to handle all of it.
Would it be a matter in which we could treat provincial regulations the same way we treat international regulations, such that you would have an anti-dumping clause with some teeth behind it and, quite frankly, countervailing tariff clauses, if one province were found to be subsidizing a product and shipping it to another province? Has your industry looked at that?