I certainly have made my views known to the province and provincial fisheries ministers from before Jim Barkhouse's days as provincial fisheries minister. Their attitude is to accommodate the fishermen, and the fishermen feel that it's in their interest to have the maximum number of buyers available to create price pressure. They like to sell. As a quick example, if you and I went to the shore tomorrow, with no relationship to anybody, simply as two individuals with a rented truck, they would sell us lobsters for the same price or for 25ยข a pound more, or even a little less because we're paying cash, and cash is nice because it's not traceable, and they would give us the crates they have from whoever their regular dealer is. We'd throw them on our truck and leave. We wouldn't need any infrastructure at all. What that does is create pressure on the existing dealers in the community. They're afraid of losing the lobster product because they've already committed overhead. They've already hired people, they have bait, they have gear, they have advances out to the fishermen, and if they don't get the lobster, they can't offset those.
The province is very sensitive to what the fishermen want as opposed to what's good for the industry.