There was also talk about the chapters that were closed when Canada started to take part in the negotiations. I can assure you, all of those chapters were opened and discussed. There were changes made within those chapters.
A case in point from an agricultural perspective, cheese compositional standards were taken away in one of those closed chapters. We were able to open it and bring that back into Canada's favour. That's worth about $800 million to our dairy farmers. There were a lot of discussions.
You made the comment about quasi-slavery on some of the catching boats around the world. There are chapters in there on labour standards, environmental standards, and on food safety as well. The countries exporting product into Canada, in order to gain our market, have to do it to Canadian standards. The labour that they pay on their boat has to be to Canadian standards; the environment that they're working in has to be to our standards, and of course the food safety has to be to our standards as well, to keep us safe so that we're not importing stuff that is less than what we expect in Canada. It is very important to have those chapters in there.
When you folks from Grand Manan talked about not having a proper briefing, have you asked for one now? You have a local guy who is the Minister of Fisheries. I'm sure Dominic would be happy to sit down with you, or your parent organization will call him, to run through everything.