Very good.
Keeping on the tack with national parks, when I was a warden--I was a back country warden--I was by myself for 15 days, working on the north boundary of Jasper National Park. In the fall, of course, bighorn sheep hunting would start. Of course it's a very interesting and lucrative hunt for the guides and so on who are out there.
As an officer, I was equipped with fairly meagre resources insofar as defending myself, shall I say, whereas a hunter usually came fully able to do what they needed to do for their activities.
At the time, I remember thinking to myself that the maximum penalty for poaching of bighorn sheep, I believe, if you look at the schedule at the time, was $130,000. It might be $150,000 now. That's going to $1 million.
Maybe, Ms. Pearson, you would be the person I'm directing my question to. What assurances can we give to front-line enforcement officers who may be in a position where they're about to apprehend somebody who is facing a maximum penalty of $1 million? What assurances can we give to those front-line enforcement officers who are doing that, when the person they might be apprehending will be making a judgment call as to whether or not they want to pay that $1 million, or face that possibility?