I don't feel threatened by the deal, because we've been in Nova Scotia for 160 years. We've been through free trade agreements that allow countries access by Canada. I think that the world has been levelled to a certain degree, and we have to be competitive in nature to solve a unique problem with each individual customer, whether that's making it in Canada for a Canadian customer, or making it in Canada for a U.S. customer, or making it overseas for a Canadian customer, or cross-docking—landing it in the U.S. for a U.S.-based customer.
We have all kinds of avenues we can pursue, so I wouldn't say that any of these countries is a threat to our business or really a threat to our industry. Our industry was rebalanced in 1993, and it was pretty much decimated across the country then.
In sum, the more access we have to labour and the more access we have to markets as well, the more beneficial it will be.