That's a good point to make.
Also, in exchanges with colleagues in previous interventions, you talked about how, when establishing a new farm, you have to pay attention to the distance between a new farm and an existing one.
I want to turn to the subject of backyard flocks, because in my neck of the woods, it's a very rural area and people love keeping chickens. They love being able to go out every morning and collect their eggs. People feel very strongly attached to that farming practice. They feel it's a very important part of our local food security. How do you envision those two worlds living side by side, where we are both paying attention to the very real biosecurity concerns that may be present from backyard flocks, especially with avian influenza, and also trying to make sure that people's sense of food security and providing for their own families is also not disturbed?
What could we reasonably do to alleviate those problems?