Mr. Doubleday, we're going to leave that and pick up on this again, because we're almost two minutes over time on that answer. I appreciate that some of these answers are more complex and I'm trying to give DFO staff and the minister time to answer them, but we are running out of time.
Just before we go to Mr. Lunney, I have a quick question, if I might, on these collaborative arrangements on quota, if you will, for the production of science.
The difficulty with that--and I'm sure you're well aware of it--is the fact that the fishermen are never satisfied and never happy with the agreement. They always feel that there are winners and losers being picked, quite frankly, by DFO. There's quota given to certain directed fisheries and there are other directed fisheries in the same fishery--maybe hook and line, or handliners, or the inshore fishery--that are not getting quota, whereas another group, maybe the longline fleet or the dragger fleet, in most cases will get quota.
How do you answer those questions? Have you looked at doing it a different way? Have you looked at putting more observers on board to try to get the science? There's a fair science budget there and it fundamentally doesn't appear to be working.