I think to a large part it is the black market. Distributors or importers are bringing product in and then distributing it into the North American market, and this is one of the reasons it's so difficult to actually stop this activity at the border. I'll give you an example.
I've been working for 12 years with a foundry that makes automotive castings. They have had fraudulently marked product coming into the Canadian market over that period of time. We've been bounced between the Department of Finance and the CBSA. The Department of Finance, which is in charge of the regulation, says they're not prepared to rewrite the entire act; CBSA is saying that they can't enforce it unless the act is rewritten.
This is a small company. It's left to them to identify exactly who is importing this. It's probably a distributor operating a semi-black market and selling into the United States, but unless they have some evidence that this product is coming in, the security force at the border is saying that they can't stop it. So they've just basically...actually, they not only gave up, but they shut down operation.