Some of the boats probably are not safe to go out in, and that's probably due to the design of the boat. As Hubert pointed out, in order to get what the fishermen need sometimes, they have to build the boat in an unsafe way in order to satisfy that need. I think this is what's happening in some of the cases we've seen around the island of boats being capsized. It happened here a few days ago; one overturned. I think that's because the boats have gone beyond the stage where they should be.
You've got some 65-foot boats out there now that are very capable of fishing in the conditions they fish in, but if you go beyond.... At this time of the year, my boat right now is out fishing. This is our last trip, and I doubt if she's capable of fishing beyond this time of the year. In fact, I know she's not. You've probably got more boats here that are quite capable of going out and fishing beyond. It depends. I'm at no virtue to say whether those boats should be on the water or not. I don't know.
It's a question you should leave to the individual fishermen. If they feel safe to be out there in a boat of 65 feet, then that's fine. If they think they need to go into a bigger boat because of safety aspects, then leave that to the fishermen too--but if they do that, then don't come back and say, well, I need another million pounds of fish. That's going to come from me, you know what I mean? It comes from the overall IQ. In order for the person going into the 100-footer to get an extra million pounds of fish, it's going to come from me as an individual who wants to stay in the boat that I'm already in.