I think it's been compromised to the effect that what we're seeing is a chipping away of the foundation of what keeps it in place here. And to a certain extent, there's a little bit of jiggery-pokery happening here, because if you keep the tariff quotas the same but you reduce the tariffs, then you're essentially still freeing it up. You're making it easier for those imports to come in. It's making it more profitable for any company that's exporting, say, from another country into Canada. It's making it a more attractive option for those people. So if you just chip a little bit away there, you could say that things are still the same because we still retain those tariff quotas. But the tariffs have dropped. So a little later on, say under the WTO, you may see those tariff rate quotas going up. And then again the tariffs within that limit may drop as well.
So it's death by a thousand cuts. Over a period of time we're seeing the gradual weakening of that system.