I did. I actually belong to the Atlantic Salmon Federation, and I would note that across much of eastern Canada, Atlantic salmon runs have been rebounding dramatically.
In fact, I asked Bill Taylor, the executive director, whether we would ever have to commercially fish wild Atlantic salmon stocks because of the Atlantic salmon that are produced in net pen aquaculture. He did admit to me that we will probably never have to commercially fish wild Atlantic salmon stocks.
Going to the west coast—I know you're not from the west coast and neither am I—I was interested in a report from DFO. Given that net pen aquaculture has been going on off the west coast since 1985, and that in 2010 the Fraser River sockeye returns were 30 million fish, the best return since 1913, and that in rivers across B.C., from Skeena and Barkley Sound, and Smith Inlet and so on, the sockeye runs, at least in 2011, were above expectations, how do you square your opposition to net pen aquaculture with what appears to be a resurgence in sockeye runs off the west coast in the presence of aquaculture?