I think there are two issues. One is displaced workers and towns where there are no longer any fishing or fish processing activities; the other is the older worker issue, which the deputy has talked to.
There's actually a growing concern in the industry about labour shortages, both for crew as well as for processing jobs. You see advertisements now for foreign workers; that's been a practice in the past. So there is a need to really look at how we manage both the processing and the harvesting. The federal government looks after harvesting, and we are introducing measures to preserve the independence of the inshore fleet in Atlantic Canada, trying to make sure the enterprises rest with the inshore fishing fleet and at the same time allowing combining, so that those who remain in the industry will be able to get the crew and make the livelihood necessary to attract and retain workers, both in harvesting and processing, where the same thing will have to be contemplated. We aren't getting younger workers into the fish processing business, and unless that happens, obviously there's going to be a labour shortage shortly.
So both of those are elements of the April 12 announcement.