In terms of the relationship between our staff and the DFO staff, they were brought together down there to carry out a monitoring program. The DFO staff were validators, but they were also doing other studies, like scale samples, weighing and measuring fish, and determining the species of fish or the races of sockeye that were going to different areas.
As far as encountering infractions goes, there were infractions on the part of some individuals. What the monitors do is contact our fishery coordinator and the council, and all we do is deliver the message to the violators that this is not part of our agreement and that we can't support them in that activity. If they were fishing outside an authorized fishery, we would deliver the information that we would not support them financially or legally if they were charged for that fishing. They would have to suffer the consequences.
And just in addition to that, this year I think there were only going to be three to five charges laid, whereas in the past there have been anywhere from 40 to 100 or even 150 charges laid on an annual basis for fishing infractions.