I think first of all, one of the ways that government could help us with the CUSMA implications—and this is something that Mr. Shoan actually brought up—is that right now we have a very porous border and there is a lot of diafiltered milk coming across our border, and this is not being inspected. Anything that looks white is just coming across as powder, getting across our tariff limits. So that's something that our government could really do, if it could help out with the CBSA and make sure it's more strict on products that are already coming in to Canada. That would be significant and would really go a long way in helping Canadian dairy farmers and a lot of other industries in regulating our borders and making sure they're tight and up to date with what is allowed.
As for your compensation question, I think I've answered that a few times. Of course, Canadian dairy farmers, as you mentioned, would just prefer to fill market share themselves. I think we worry about the future. As was mentioned before, Brexit is around the corner. The U.K. will be looking to negotiate its own trade deal and, of course, it was part of CETA when we agreed to that, where we had already given dairy market concessions. So we worry about what the U.S. did during the CPTPP agreement, which was pulling out of it, and then, of course, we gave them new concessions.
So we really want to be clear with the government that this will not happen with the U.K., because we're sitting on an industry now that's going to be faced with death by a million paper cuts. You can't keep giving out small increments of percentages of dairy market shares. There won't be an industry left.