I can answer briefly, but I think Ms. Greenwood might have some more useful information.
The wage subsidy is quite problematic, because it has been difficult to target it well to producers. Some people who needed it, as you say, weren't eligible for it, and some people are getting it, and we're basically subsidizing businesses that would have been profitable anyway. It's very difficult to make that work, although the CERB has been excellent, because everybody who got it was laid-off for lost time. The CERB was much better targeted than the wage subsidy.
I certainly think that helping any businesses manage their rent is going to be key to helping businesses stay afloat. That's not the supply chain per se, but that's helping businesses make it through here, because I think everybody's having a tough time paying rent.
Obviously, with Biden being elected in the United States that will, hopefully, help health measures in the States, and that will help us have safer trade with them as well. The key thing has been that the numbers in the United States are just so much higher than they are in Canada that it's quite difficult to trade safely.