Obviously, because of these other crises across the sector, adding tariffs on top of that—the new ones we just received, the potential 25% tariff the president-elect is talking about and, by the way, potentially another 15% next year.... The sector cannot carry on with these kinds of duties and tariffs looming over its head. I would say to you that, because of a whole bunch of factors—softwood being one of them—we have businesses, right now, that are on the brink. They have to reconsider whether they can make investments. That's the scary part.
To your point, if there was an additional $9 billion back in the sector, it would certainly help us maintain and sustain many of the businesses that are out there today employing a lot of Unifor members, thousands of them, all across this country.
In addition to that, I think that, as you mentioned, we have to look to the long term regarding how to have a coordinated development strategy for the sector going into the future. That's critical, too, so that we're not looking at this in a piecemeal way but rather planning it in a much more consistent fashion. This will benefit workers and the communities in which they live.