First of all, although the regulations changed back to where we didn't have to wash all the equipment when it returned from the United States, whether we're required to do it or not, it's on our dime and we have to do it. We wouldn't have any customers if we didn't do that.
We've also engaged the provincial government especially, and industry people, in helping us. We're buying stations; we're assembly yards. People come to our facility. All of their animals have different health statuses. We are going to get a bug in our station, no matter what. Whether it's clean or not, the next day it could be dirty again.
The biggest thing we're concentrating on is developing proper procedures to biocontain, to keep that bug in our station. When we procure the livestock, we're buying them and moving them as quickly as possible. Basically, if I buy your animals today, tomorrow I want them on a truck and to be harvested the next day, so if they do come into something, they're not shedding it out the back end.