I will use myself as an example. In my own community we've had warring factions, and they've been in the media across the country. Those are our tour boats. The harbour authority, during the last 19 years that we have been operating, has been the mediator in a lot of this between the tour boats, the tour boats and the oil industry, the fish harvesters and the fish farms, the fish harvesters and the oil industry, the fish harvesters and the tour boats. The harbour authority, a group of volunteers in the middle, have been the mediators. If we were gone, the members--federally and provincially--and the small craft harbours directorate would have an ungodly job in this province. We have even gotten involved with archeology because we have an historic site at the bottom of the harbour. We're working on deals between that and the offshore oil.
If you ever want to find people who can juggle, you have four of them here and a thousand more around this province. That's what we're doing every day.
There is a burnout thing there. We have a lot of interest. It seems every time we have an election, we get new people on our board, just as Kevin has mentioned. They are interested, but you do get burnout. I've been there for 19 years, and I think I've been wanting to get a kick in the arse for 19 years, but I have to do it because it's my community. It's my industry, and I want my community to survive.