I think your question was on the recommendations we made as alternative solutions. I will send the information, but in summary, so it's on the record, right now the method of dealing with it is prohibition of movement and there are prohibition requirements placed on various landowners. What happens with a prohibition of movement is you may have a beetle find, one beetle in a trap in the northeast quadrant of your property--you own 1,000 hectares--and your entire property receives a prohibition of movement.
Because we have a fair bit of background doing certification of movement--i.e., the Canada-U.S. certificates of origin--we've proposed implementing a control of custody certificate program that would monitor at all times where wood was moving, basically from the stump to the grave, if you will, and provide a database that could be used not just for Atlantic Canada or this beetle, but once implemented it would help anywhere in Canada when you need it. If you had an outbreak, you would be able to trace back for movement.
The response in that instance was that the act, which is the Plant Protection Act of Canada, required under ministerial authority a movement certificate issued by the government, which is basically a piece of paper--it doesn't have a database with it, it doesn't have anything. The difference, whether it was practical and effective or just provided by legislative authority, meant this went away.
That's a short summary.