Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
I know that Mr. Masse had indicated the bread scandal and the collusion associated with that. Coming from a farming community, I just wanted to make the point that even if you doubled the price of bread, farmers would only be getting a few pennies more. There is a lot of money made in agriculture, but it's not necessarily made by farmers.
What I'd like to do is talk to Mr. Lacroix as far as the Teamsters are concerned. It's been so important to get the products to the stores. I know that there were major issues earlier on. I had spoken with a lot of people who were concerned—the truckers and so on—about simple things like having public washrooms open, places where they could pick up food, and so on. Hopefully we've learned something from that.
The other thing we can look at is maybe for the grocery people. When we go to our local co-ops and so on to pick up our groceries, we see the great effort that is being made, and we see the workers wiping down the equipment between customers. We see the little dots on the floor. People understand that if we follow those, we'll be able to continue working together. I think that's critical.
I'm not sure who initiated some of those things, and I'm curious whether those were steps that the workers were helping to incorporate, and what other suggestions you might have for front-line workers, whether it be those who are on the grocery line, or—perhaps starting with you, Mr. Lacroix—those who are actually getting that food to our stores.