Thank you.
Certainly Canadian standards and U.S. standards are not uniform in everything. A lot of commentators indicate that Canadian standards would actually have to rise in order to meet U.S. standards in most instances, so it is not an issue necessarily of racing to the bottom.
I also want to stress the fact that what we're talking about is regulatory cooperation, not just harmonization. In fact, the announcement in January that Mr. Allison spoke of also contained two other funding announcements that were very important toward regulatory cooperation. They were about important programs and issues to highlight what we're talking about here. One of the announcements was for funds to help the Canadian Border Services Agency and the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency harmonize and come together and cooperate on their programs for registering companies crossing the border, their Partners in Protection program and the C-TPAT program. Rather than having two programs that essentially do exactly the same thing, operated by each country so that a company has to register twice and go through the process twice, they're looking at exactly the same thing. They're doing exactly the same thing, trying to actually put these programs together to create that kind of efficiency.
That's what we mean by regulatory cooperation as well.