No. The quick answer is no.
We need a declaration. I think we need to restate what the policies are here, and we need some direct intervention on these companies. Nobody has been charged, not that there would be charges, but there could be charges. There could be legal issues here that have been contravened and need to be addressed.
Until that's done, what you'll see is what I heard earlier today, that these thinly veiled financial deals between harvesters and companies, whether they be Canadian or foreign, obfuscate the actual intent, which is, as we know, to hold control of those licences.
If you have a declaration and nothing has happened in two years, we need to get at the issue here, because, my friends, there are cartel-like activities. Harvesters come to me and say that this should be investigated by the Competition Bureau, because what's happening here is that they all have the same price. They treat the harvesters like hockey players—a good reference today. They can own them, they can trade them and they can sell them. That's not what we bought into with the Canadian harvesting licences. We need to get back to that.
I know that's long-winded, but thank you for that question.