Thank you, everybody.
It's good to have you back again, Greg. My questions will be for you.
This is from a press statement of the BC Council of Forest Industries' response to the latest mill closures, from September 5, 2024:
COFI calls on British Columbia to work with the federal government to put in place a durable solution to the long-standing Canada-US softwood lumber trade dispute. Urgent action is required to defend BC producers, workers, and communities from the disruptive impacts of these unfair and unwarranted tariffs.
Greg, you just referred to them. After nine years and three U.S. presidents, we still don't have a softwood lumber agreement. Because of that lack of action, we saw softwood lumber tariffs double this summer to 14.5%. We have heard that it's going up another 11%, and you just said it's going up to 30%.
How have these softwood lumber tariff increases affected forest families in B.C.?