That's right. This is in the context of the softwood lumber agreement. It's a fairly complex puzzle, but fundamentally, royalty rates in Atlantic Canada were always high because of our private land mixture vis-à-vis the percentage of crown land in the rest of Canada. Our stumpage rates were high while the rest of Canada had low stumpage rates, but they had a duty, which sort of equalized the whole calculation. Now, the duty has gone away because of the price of lumber. Once lumber got above a floor price then the duty disappeared, so we've resided with a high stumpage rate.
This is an internal problem in Canada and the Maritimes is a small player in this whole exercise, so we have to find out again how we fit in that world.