I would like to separate two things. In British Columbia, we have habitat biologists and technicians, and we have fishery officers. They're two different groups.
With respect to the fishery officers in B.C., there will be no reduction in their numbers. The minister announced at the beginning of the summer that the reductions that had been planned would not take place, and that there would actually be an augmentation. So we're going from about 149 fishery officers in 2005-06 to about 173. It will take a short while to do this, because we have to recruit them. But that's where we're going with the fishery officers.
With respect to the habitat biologists, we are going to be reducing staff. They will go down from the numbers you talked about. In part, this is offset by the increase in the number of fishery officers. Fishery officers in B.C. will continue to have, certainly in the transition, habitat responsibilities at a certain level. The second thing is that we adopted environmental process modernization. We have changed our approach to managing habitat, putting more emphasis on higher-risk activity. But there will be an adjustment in the numbers of habitat staff. We expect to arrive at somewhere around the amount you indicated.