No. And for the other reserves, the other territories....
Politically, recalling the Oka crisis, it will be quite difficult to go on the reserves and shut down those manufacturing facilities. I'm from Chateauguay and I lived through what happened during that crisis. My mother had to sell her house and move out of Chateauguay because of what happened. The best way, we believe, is to cut off the supply of other materials.
It's not even illegal for the manufacturers of filters or cigarette paper to supply the illicit manufacturing facilities. How can they do that without paying any kind of penalties for doing that? For raw tobacco, that has changed—you're not allowed to do that. But you need to seize it, and to do that, you have to know where the product is coming from. Ontario made a great move by passing Bill 186. It's the implementation that's taking time. An RCMP document leaked at one point in time showed that a considerable portion of the tobacco grown in Ontario was going to the illicit manufacturing facilities on the reserves. So it's a major concern but there's no control whatsoever on that tobacco right now.
Once this bill is implemented, controlling the tobacco coming from the Ontario belt is going to be very helpful. That's why we need to choke off these illicit manufacturing facilities by preventing the supplies of the materials.