Thank you.
Of course, I think that for anyone on the outside seeing that there's special money for provinces impacted by the softwood lumber dispute and that this money went to other provinces, it really wouldn't sit all that well. It's a bit of an unusual system.
I'll go on to my next question. Within this crisis we're having in the forestry industry—and certainly, I would consider myself to be representing a riding that is impacted—Kamloops is a major centre. If you go one and a half hours up one highway, you will see a mill that closed, and if you go one and a half hours up the other highway you will see another mill that closed, both leaving a couple of hundred people out of work. These just happened. There's nothing really that different about these two communities. They're rural communities. Their closest centre is Kamloops, and they're in different regions, so there are different hours that are available and different hours that you need to have worked to be eligible for the EI program.
Did your department look at these issues during this current crisis in British Columbia? I ask because if one happens to draw a line in one place on the map and excludes some communities, a really different playing field really results for those in equivalent circumstances.