I don't remember the exact numbers. Dennis might remember them better than me. Some money was put forward to help the packers with resiliency, with coming around after the Cargill thing in Alberta.
You heard Dennis say that the packers in North America spent $1.5 billion to keep their workers safe. That's a substantial amount of money that they paid by themselves to make sure the system kept going.
I mean, nobody has any money. The federal government put in.... I talk to Minister Bibeau a lot. I think they did as well as they could, given the circumstances. We kept rolling.
The set-aside program was really good. I'm not afraid to say that if it sat on the shelf so that it could be made available when needed.... The only problem with it was that it was 60 days too late. We had built up 130,000 head and that takes a long time to get through. At that point, when you have cattle, you don't just get to put them on the shelf. They keep getting bigger and they will eventually succumb to old age. It's not as bad as the pork industry, but you can't keep cattle alive forever.