What I suggested was to immediately set up a task force on the future of the industry, but we have provided recommendations on market penetration, improvements in infrastructure, removal of barriers to industry rationalization, smart regulations, and elimination of overlap and duplication of federal-provincial regulations, more investment in research and innovation, implementing the SR and ED refundability, and extending the two years to five years on CCA.
I have to say, though, we're still investing $4 billion a year. Provincial regulations have stopped us from investing more, because—and now I'm going to point my finger at the Province of Quebec, because they're slowest to improve this—they insist that each stick of wood is targeted to one little town. As a result, if someone wants to invest in a high-quality, modern mill, they can't get the wood supply. The province actually stops it.
That is one of the reasons that when the dollar was low we didn't do the necessary investment in rationalization. We are investing $4 billion a year—I want to put that on the record. But the necessary restructuring into world-class mills did not happen in eastern Canada because the provinces simply said no, if you don't allow a mill in each town, we won't allow you to have trees in this province.
B.C. fixed it, but a little bit later.