On the storm surge part of it, I do agree with his points. We all have large shipping areas, and oil is a big issue to all of us. We're all just waiting to see when something is going to happen, in Placentia Bay more than anywhere else, and St. Mary's Bay, because there's so much oil traffic directly through those areas.
Growing up as a fish harvester in my own community, I never thought of storm surges as being a fear. Now you watch the storm surge warning as much as you watch the weather warnings. When you see a small community with no wind or tide, and all of a sudden, on a beautiful day, in a matter of two hours there's no water left in the inner part of the harbour in an area where's there's 25 feet of water, and then in a matter of three hours the wharf is underwater--these are the things that have been happening in the last couple of years that never happened before.
Because of those surges, the small marginal wharf we replaced a couple of years back was actually built higher than the previous one that had been there before. Everything that we're doing now is going higher, because we do see the conditions are getting worse. Again, that puts the price up, but if we don't make those moves and don't put in the higher breakwaters and everything, what we have is not going to last.