One of the things that differentiate what happened in Ontario from what happens in western Canada is that there was no piece of federal legislation governing Ontario farmers, so they decided to form a co-operative, or however they ended up banding it together, and they took a vote to put that back together. There was no legislation that stopped them from moving forward. There is in western Canada, and we're getting rid of that legislation. Then if farmers, when they put this new entity back together in year one, two, three, four, five--or whatever it takes--decide to have a vote, then we'll be more than happy to do that and to facilitate it. In 1943 when this was brought in as a war measures act, there was no vote to put it into place.
So farmers are telling us about the speed of commerce thing and to get on with this, to get it done, and to give them the freedom to make the choices they need to make.”