Most definitely.
A simple example is in Ontario where you see one county or municipality that has a very rigid protocol requiring, to your point, bunkhouses and a certain square footage of bunkhouse that could only maintain four workers. You take a five-minute drive over the road to another county, another municipality, and that same bunkhouse size can hold up to 10, and it is literally a kilometre or two down the road. Those inconsistencies create havoc and added costs, structure and strain to a market in a very stressful environment for a grower who's trying to manage the best-case scenario. For workers who have been coming to their farms for many years and are really, in some cases, part of their family, they have tried to leverage hotel rooms, if they're available, close by at, again, added cost. The funding that has been provided by the federal government of $1,500 per worker has helped, but it's still not enough to offset the total cost of isolation.
How do we look at consistency? Well, the Public Health Agency of Canada did provide guidance and direction, recognizing that the federal approach is that the boots on the ground at the regional level have a better understanding of how those regions need to operate. There still needs to be more discussion at the federal and provincial and territorial levels to ensure that provinces can take a more effective lead to harmonize an approach, at least across the province, to enable, let's call it, a consistent, healthy, safe and competitive world for the farmers.
I'll give you an example. Right now, the challenge we're seeing is that we have 85% of the workers we would normally have at this time, but that's 85% of a total that was already short last year, and so we have a greater shortage in the actual number of workers we need. Adding protocols and restrictions that may be over and above the requirements that even the Public Health Agency of Canada have identified is just creating more of a strain on access to Canadian food.
On putting workers into the field if they are not showing symptoms, there has been some discussion. They're isolated on a farm. Can you just take that isolated group and have them working within an isolated environment? A range of discussions have been proposed, but we do recognize that some of the direction from public health is most definitely warranted.