It's going to have an impact in a couple of ways. One is the ability for us to get product across the border. The other is our ability to receive inputs or supplies—including packaging—from the U.S.
As I pointed out earlier, we deal with a fairly major transportation disruption, it seems, almost every year.
In my sector, where we're doing processing, a lot of times we are delivering to distribution centres. The distribution centres have a certain supply of products we've manufactured. We are just-in-time delivery, but we have that buffer.
We are already seeing a backup of trucks, as everyone is. Because of the amount of time it takes for that to register in the grocery store or in plants that can't operate because they don't have supplies, it hasn't hit yet.
It has to be clear to all of us that the sooner the blockades are ended—as would be the case in a strike or anything else—the better off supply chains will be.