As Mr. Stoffer indicated and as I responded, the point here is that the commercial industry itself recognizes that as a concern. It is a strongly held view in some camps more so than in others; nevertheless, it is a strongly held view. To try to address that in part, the constraints around the trading of allocation put limits on how much can be exchanged between different groups.
The second thing, as you have noted, is that it is a three-year pilot, not a long-term commitment. It is designed to be evaluated and to determine whether we get unintended effects, such as concentrations that are unreasonable, inappropriate, and not agreeable, such that adjustments need to be made.
The final point I would make on this is that the comparison with this pilot can't be with the past, because the past is not relevant any more for groundfish. The reality is that we had to take measures to address the bycatch problems. If we hadn't taken those measures, that would have put at risk the commercial groundfish fishery in B.C., at least in terms of how long that fishery would have been able to go in any particular year. If we hadn't made those adjustments, we would have had significant economic dislocation.