There are two things, and one you picked up on. It has always been a challenge if you have a market that tends to be so unbalanced between us and Mexico—and even in the States it can be unbalanced in certain areas—because just invites more of an underground economy, which is very alive and well, in certain sectors more than others. Without trade provisions and protections, that's exactly what you get, a thriving underground economy, and nobody wins. Nobody gets the taxes, nobody gets the revenue and nobody gets the product.
We had lobbied for better access to the U.S. because our training is based on the same model. Our members belong to 15 international unions, and the same training standards and accreditation go back and forth across the borders. There's not an issue there. The problem is some of the lack of accreditation and understanding on the Mexican side. Again, that just invites more of an underground economy. Then nobody wins, and nobody can really judge what that level is because then you get into a situation where companies are undermining each other based on the cost of labour and really trying to make a profit off the backs of working families.
I hope that has answered some of your questions.