As a matter of fact, we are, throughout this region and in New Brunswick. I was part of the conservation board, as the chief in New Brunswick, before I went to Ottawa. I did work with the committee to save Musquash and to put into place the management area for fisheries in the Bay of Fundy. I know that my colleagues here in Nova Scotia are doing the same thing.
Yes, we're teaching our children off the reserve. Every three years, with the funding we receive from Environment Canada, we host the youth for a three-day colloquium. The last one we held in Cornwallis. All they do for three days is focus on environmental issues and traditional issues. It's through Iqaluit, our MAARS program through DFO. The three organizations, the three maritime provinces—New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and P.E.I.—the three off-reserve councils bring the youth from each council over. They get credit in their schools for it, a science credit. We've made arrangements with the schools to get that science credit.