Further to that, the area I represent was logged in the 1700s and 1800s and now we have very little tree coverage, but that's a story for another day. We're trying to do better than what we did, but there's part of our heritage in that too.
There's something I wonder about. In the riding I represent, there's an automotive tool and die and mold-making industry which has reinvented itself. We've found that many of the patents and our value-added work was being shipped elsewhere and then sometimes even shipped back to us to be fixed.
I'm just wondering whether or not we're doing enough to look at our own domestic capacity. Instead of constantly fighting to try to penetrate to get it to the United States, can we do more domestically with an agenda to do more value-added production of our softwood lumber? You're right that it has properties that are much better than many of the U.S. products and it's also done in a better way, too.
Is there something more we can do here domestically? I just feel we're missing an opportunity.