I do for sure. Anything that increases research and innovation funding for agriculture, in our view, is a win. There are lots and lots of opportunities. What we unfortunately see, as I mentioned in my presentation, is a lot of research happening but not getting out to the farm population. That's a huge issue. If we're spending $650 million, it would really be nice if all of that made it out to the farming population so that everybody knows it's there.
There's another thing we'd like to see. Of course, research and innovation is good, but with a lot of the programs, like the previous Growing Forward program, innovators on the farm are taking risks all the time, but none of the programs will compensate them for taking those risks.
The programs are inherently designed to take the ideas of the innovators and then help bring on the rest of the farming population with incentives. The really early innovators don't get any incentive at all to do these things, and that's something we should change. They're taking enormous risks trying new things on their own. It could be thousands or, in some cases, millions of dollars' worth of investment to try something that may not work. They really should have some kind of funding assistance to help them mitigate their risks.