That's a great question. British Columbia is leading the pack in this regard. Our premier, in the throne speech, promised a wood-first policy, and we are working on it. All public buildings built in British Columbia will have a requirement to use wood wherever possible. This is good from three perspectives: it increases demand; it increases demand outside the residential sector into the commercial and non-residential sectors; and it allows us to showcase the use of wood in these applications to our customers all across the world, including the United States. The non-residential market in the United States is some $500 billion a year. We get about 6% of that. If we could raise that to 10%, we'd be creating huge new markets for our solid wood products. That is one of the things we can do.
On the loan guarantee piece, I'm with Mr. Arsenault. We don't see that stuff on the ground. It would be nice to see how we can tangibly decrease the coupon value of our debt, because it's high. But you have to watch out for the softwood lumber agreement there, folks. We can't be seen as doing something that provides a subsidy, so we always have to put our eye on that one.
I'm sorry for answering two questions.