In the negotiations, consideration was given to whether there should be some kind of exchange rate adjustment mechanism that would affect the triggers and the duties, but if we were to do that, it would have been a mechanism that would go both ways. It would help you when the dollar was appreciating, but it would hurt you when the dollar was depreciating. It was decided, at the end of the day, that it was just a gamble that was a complicating factor that would not help.
In general, I would say this: the higher value of the Canadian dollar will probably contribute to keeping lumber prices higher rather than lower over the next few years, simply because it keeps the cost base of Canadian production up, which is a huge part of the U.S. market, and probably keeps prices up. But predicting prices, as you know, is a mug's game.