I think we have the infrastructure there. We just need to give the green light to the provincial apiarists and the bee inspectors working across this great country, along with the Canadian Association of Professional Apiculturists, and we need to give them the mandate to go ahead and actually do that, and give them some facilities to be able to do that. I think we have it there. It's just that we have national problems that are now being recognized as national problems rather than just as provincial problems.
Of course, beekeeping like agriculture is a provincial jurisdiction in many respects. It isn't a federal jurisdiction, so the harmonization between the federal activities and the provincial activities could be brought about through this infrastructure. We have in Alberta, as was already mentioned, the bee disease diagnostic clinic, in Beaverlodge, which I think is a fantastic stride forward through the Alberta initiative. Also in Brooks, Alberta, is the diagnostic lab for monitoring diseases in leafcutter bees, which are extremely important economically, particularly in the prairie provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan, and increasingly so in Alberta.
I wouldn't be the person to say how to do it, but I think there are lots of people there who would get together with great enthusiasm to try to get it into place.