These arrangements generally come from sessions that the department has with industry. When we're working with fishermen and developing an integrated fisheries management plan, we generally say, as the department, here's what we can do in terms of conservation, and here's what we can do in terms of science; here are the types of things we think you're going to need to manage the fishery. When we get fishermen asking if they can just do this, that, and the other as well, that's when we enter into the JPAs.
The idea is that the department sort of gives them the bottom line on what we need to be able to manage a fishery effectively. If they want something more that will help on the economic side, and all that stuff, that's the idea of the JPAs. The JPAs are meant to fit with the integrated fisheries management plans and the collaborative arrangements with industry. That's generally how we try to do it. There are some instances when the department says we need to have something done and we should put out an RFP. So there are many different ways to do it.
On the point you raised at the end, Mr. Chair, on whether there is a different way to do it, we spent much of the last eight months thinking about that. The answer is that there has to be; the courts have said there has to be. We absolutely believe in collaborative arrangements. Most of industry tells us they absolutely believe in them, although some folks in industry were saying, “Yippee, this court case says we don't have to do anything.”
But we do believe in shared stewardship. We do believe that it's a public resource, and when you have a private benefit there's a responsibility that goes with that. As Bill said, we are about to go out on a tour to talk to industry exactly about that. We were unable to do that until we had this policy framework and knew what the budget would be.
What Bill went through was this year's approach. We know that we really need to engage industry for the long term. Industry needs to be part of this solution, and we need to think through how we're going to do this in the fishery writ large. I think some of the questions you've raised will absolutely be front and centre in the discussions that Bill and some of us are starting next week in Vancouver.