The issue of salmon hatcheries on the east and west coasts has largely to do with history and how the fisheries have developed.
As David would have said last week, it is an order of magnitude issue as well, regarding the west coast commercial fisheries, first nations fisheries, SSE fisheries, as well as a major recreational fishery.
The recreational fishery is very significant on the east coast, and we've been very active there working with stakeholders. We have an Atlantic salmon advisory committee session coming up on May 25. We talked to the stakeholders about what the priorities are. Hatcheries are on that list, but they're not necessarily on the top of that list.
We have the gene banking facilities. We have the Atlantic salmon endowment fund, which was announced recently, that supports community stakeholder groups, community stewardship groups, and those types of things. We're working with stakeholders right now on a wild Atlantic salmon conservation policy, which we hope to be coming out with very soon.
So the focus on the east coast is largely about stewardship. ASEF reflected that. On the west coast, I would say it is broader. That's my sense.