I personally sit on the DFAIT SME advisory panel. We meet twice a year as a group of companies. I.E.Canada is a participant observer on that particular panel. In the room are SMEs that discuss exactly that amongst themselves, and on the second day--it's a two-day meeting--the Minister of International Trade comes in, and the group, as a whole, makes recommendations to them.
I think at this point there is discussion amongst Canadian traders about the fact that, quite frankly, we've had it very easy for the past couple of hundred years of living next door to the United States. Exporting hasn't really needed to be all that front of mind. We've tossed it over the fence. With the new real economy that's out there, Canadian companies are sort of now looking and not necessarily wanting to put all their eggs in one basket. There have been active discussions with the trade commissioner of services on--I'm going to say--improving and changing specific services. And I have to say that we're seeing the right signs that we want to see DFAIT engaging, and they are offering whatever help exporters need, given the fact that--we will agree, and we do agree--in the past between the types of services that were offered and maybe the types of services that were needed, there was a gap.