I didn't know that we'd have this committee, so I'm just going from memory.
Last October, a delegation of toolmakers from Korea was invited to the Greater Toronto Area. OEMs from Canada were encouraged to go there. Basically, it was like, “Toolmakers, here are our Canadian OEMs. Go to it.” Again, Korea is a low-cost country, and here was a way for our Canadian OEMs to save some money. That's what I'm against.
Obviously we've had great ongoing relationships with the government. At the MP show in 2003, there was a luncheon hosted by the Canadian government. They invited a Mexican delegation to go with our Canadian toolmakers, and that was a really good thing. The Canadian government identified a plumbing issue in Mexico, and a lot of our people could build plastic pipe and so on and so forth for things related to the plumbing industry in Mexico. They said it was going to be about a $1-billion overhaul of the Mexican sewage system, and that was a great opportunity. And there have been several other great trade missions.
I'm not trying to throw the government under the bus for one thing, because we've had other good things. But the good things that you should focus on are good trade missions like that, positive trade missions in terms of identifying a problem. There's a shortage of skilled work in that field in Mexico, so that's a really good example of the government working with us.