As we've said all along, Mr. Zimmer, it's about certainty and clarity, including for the farmers who are doing fall work right now. In your part of the country, they're putting on fertilizers and chemicals to get ready for next year's crops, and they need to know what they're going to put in their air seeder and go out and do the seeding. We're making sure they have the knowledge that they will be able to market their own commodity after August 1, 2012. It's the same thing with the whole grain value chain: They need to know what's going to be required of them.
To that end, both CN and CP are doing over a billion dollars worth of renovations on their main lines across western Canada, because they know there are going to be demands on them to move more product more quickly than they do now, because we won't be dragging our sales out at the rate of one-twelfth every month, as the Wheat Board does now. There will be a lot more moving off the combine and a lot more going to market positions earlier, getting us away from starting our trucks and our augers at minus 40 degrees in January. It used to drive me nuts. I'd wait for a malt car until it was the coldest, wettest, or muddiest day of the year. Now we'll be able to put that product into market position ahead of time.