I think the misinformation campaign out there must be combated in some way, shape, or form. One of the suggestions that was relayed to me was that maybe for every person who goes to Europe or comes from Europe--because this is where the focus is right now--there should be some information relayed at customs, a pamphlet or an information sheet talking about the realities and the facts of the seal hunt. I'm just offering that suggestion.
My last question is on the turbot quota and the 1,800 tonnes of turbot off the coast of Labrador and off of Baffin Island up into the Davis Strait that were allocated to Barry's fisheries. The minister allowed a sale of that quota to Clearwater Seafoods. It was all in the water and they just took that turbot and allowed it to be sold to another processor or harvester.
Were any conditions attached to that transfer, that there had to be some local benefits, some processing of it within Newfoundland and Labrador? I have a lot of communities with some turbot plants that could have certainly used a portion of that. How did this happen that you could take 1,800 tonnes of turbot in the water, just transfer it, and a company gets $30 million? That's what some of the stories have reported, anyway.