In my opinion, it's become a very perverse process. What happened the last time is that as the tariffs hit, our sawmills got very efficient, and they had to find ways to compete. We became very efficient, and it's a bad thing for the American sawmills. If you take that off, they will have a difficult time competing because they haven't made the investments in technology that the Canadian industry has. I don't know how this ends. It's a bad policy decision, I think, by the States, which they are going to have a very difficult time getting out of. Since the last SLA, we've upped substantially the amount of Canadian ownership in U.S. sawmills. As I understand how their structure works down there, if you have competing interests, you generally don't get to vote when it goes to a countervail discussion. The deck is stacked against us, and I don't know how it ends.
On October 4th, 2016. See this statement in context.