Thank you for being with us here on a Friday afternoon.
This one's really tough for us. We want to see business continuing to move forward into the new year. This is something that Conservatives stand for, but we've been dealt a really bad hand here right now, because—like Mr. Blaikie has said—we don't have any trigger points that we know of at this point in time to force a review in the new year. We don't know what is in the agreement, so they're telling us to close our eyes and approve it.
I know with CUSMA they wanted us to do the same thing. We identified a lot of faults in the agreement. For a lot of sectors, we wouldn't [Technical difficulty—Editor] left no compensation, no assistance, no help or no addressing of their issues at all. There's no window to do that here, so we're in a really tough spot.
Maybe I'll start off with you, Mr. Poirier. Put it in perspective for me. If this becomes a 10-year agreement, what do we need to see in it that makes sure we have a good agreement?