I think in an ideal world, yes, it would be shorter. That would be ideal. In the situation we found ourselves in, we had customers who had slowed their ordering to the absolute bare minimum and were holding their breath hoping to get through the steel tariffs, to get through NAFTA or to have section 232 reversed. We were mostly focused on the fact that there was a process we had some input into, and that we could get a remission.
Of course, we wanted them to go faster. We'd like it to have never happened or happened in a week, but we also were respectful of the fact that, like I said, we are a small piece of the imports into Canada. This is a major issue between Canada and the United States. It was impacting our business and we didn't enjoy the impact, but we did recognize the position the government was put in. They couldn't make knee-jerk decisions. They needed to have a due process. I would say they were good in communicating to us that they expected to make decisions by certain days, and I think the last one we were hoping to have was an October 15 list of those who received the remission. We knew this in September.
Timelines are one thing, but it is something else to be able to communicate to our customers the expectations and then have those expectations met. We were impressed by that. To answer your question, it would be wonderful if the list came out July 1 and we had tariffs and by July 15 we were off it. That would be our preference. However, we certainly weren't demanding it, and we recognized the greater situation at hand.