The point I was trying to make overall is that we've heard here about strategy concerning physical infrastructure, whether it be trucking terminals or rail lines or whatever else, but the point I'm bringing to the table is to have a strategy around the policy and regulatory environment.
What I mean by that is shown by the two examples I've put on the table. These are real examples that our members deal with every day.
To go back to the first example, with food, if Canada, for example, through Bill S-11 makes it a requirement that baked goods have fortified flour and it is required in all product that is going to be exported, then if the receiving country has a different regulation, those goods may be prohibited from entering. What I'm asking is, are we prepared for success from a regulatory standpoint?
The second example I brought up was that in a competitive situation with the United States—and we've had long-standing trade with the United States, and I don't need to elaborate for this committee exactly what our relationship is with the United States—it took almost four years to catch up with something that the Americans did simply because it got lost in the bureaucracy.
All I'm saying is that if we're going to enter into more trade agreements with different countries around the world, and we are wholeheartedly in favour of that, we need to start thinking very strategically. Traditionally we've only been focused on the United States, our major trading partner. They are always going to be our major trading partner. We can't take our eye off the United States. I'm just saying that we need to be a little more aware of how other countries are responding when we sign these agreements and they change regulations after the fact, and of what a negative impact this may have.
For those negative impacts not to become lost in the shuffle, we need to have some sort of body that recognizes them and reacts quickly in order to even the playing field again.