You did an interview on September 7, 2017, on CBC's Alberta@Noon show and spent the whole show talking partially about the family farm, because you're credited with a lot of inspiration for the rules that will affect the family farm. Your work is being credited publicly by the minister and others as being the inspiration for it.
I agree with you that the tax law in this is complex. That's why there's MNP trying to interpret it on behalf of farmers. While they're busy working on their family farm, MNP is giving them advice on how they should structure their business in order to avoid unnecessary taxation and also be able to pass it down to the next generation.
You had a farmer phone in who said that farmers work their whole life to pass down their land. The kids work on the farm for little wages, knowing they will receive that land eventually, and these changes will potentially increase tax on a disposition of land to children. He said the family farm will be destroyed. He's talking about these proposals. He says this will result in more large-scale agri-farming—“Big Ag”, as he calls it—at the cost of the family farm.
Do you think he's correct?