As far as ACOA providing funding for innovation in Atlantic Canada is concerned, we do. We have programs providing that funding. We do it for very specific projects that have specific outcomes and partners and legal agreements, and those sorts of things. As for whether we control all of it, I don't think so. The provincial and federal departments with a mandate specifically for fisheries development would also be involved in this.
I'm not sure I understand your reference to DFO trusting CCFI and our not trusting them. I don't think anybody has ever suggested that we don't trust CCFI. I think our position is that the role we wanted CCFI to play was making the industry familiar with the institutional capacity and allowing it to become familiar with that institutional capacity. That was our objective in getting involved with CCFI. Obviously, as years go by and people become more familiar with things and do things in different ways, that has been accomplished.
I think the message here from ACOA—and it may still be the case that other government departments would have an interest in the ongoing work they do—is that our main motivation was to act as a catalyst and to use our funding to get them together. Then, once they saw how good it was, they would carry on by themselves. That was the thinking behind this.