It has been a couple of years since I've been active on that file but it does have a long tail. I know that the government has announced that they are doing consultations on aspects of the bankruptcy system, but I believe that pertains only to the issues around pension claims in bankruptcies.
We studied PACA very carefully, because they are a very active stakeholder group that came in to meet with us over a couple of years, and what we found was that there were a significant number of regulatory changes that were made with full support from our department by the Department of Agriculture to put in place a regulatory regime for the conduct in the market. This was because what was happening was that there were a lot of players who were coming in and out of the marketplace in Canada, the fly-by-night operations, and they would effectively take money from farmers. They would take the produce. Then they would discount it when they got closer to market, and then maybe give them back their money and then they would vanish.
What was presented often as a bankruptcy problem was actually a fraud problem. It was not appropriately dealt with under the Bankruptcy Act, and I think the government did deal with it through the regulatory changes they made, which were on the licensing regime in that sector. Our data never showed that there was a high degree of losses as a result of bankruptcy in the sector. Almost every case we investigated, and we investigated a lot of them and we have a lot of data on this as a department—