On your first question on the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation, the government just announced within the last week a process to look at options for how to position that corporation in the best way going forward. A number of people were appointed to an advisory panel. We'll see what the outcome of that is. Hopefully it will be a very good, fruitful exercise that will position the corporation for a much better future.
Indigenous participation in the sector varies across the country. In B.C., about one-third of the sector already has indigenous participation. In the north, in Nunavut, where we have members, it's 100% wholly owned by indigenous communities, economic development corporations that purposely pay dividends to the communities. In Atlantic Canada and elsewhere, you have various types of business relationships between the companies and indigenous communities, whether supply or otherwise.
One of the big issues I think we would all agree on is how to build the capacity for indigenous communities to be more meaningful participants in the sector. Part of the programs I mentioned is the Pacific integrated commercial fisheries initiative. There's also one in Atlantic Canada. The government has announced a new one for northern Canada. These programs have shifted away from buying licences to providing funding, resources and training to the indigenous communities to build their capacity to operate fisheries on their own. A lot of that needs to continue, but giving them the access to licensing is the harder nut to crack, I think, in the whole issue.