I can give you a list of locations. It's on my phone. I will give it to you before the end of the hearing.
They are close to the inlets, and the inlets are where our juveniles are. We leave them alone so that they can grow big, get sexually mature, and go out and spawn. As they go out into the deep, over the edge, there could be an interception.
Our biggest concern isn't with the three operations, but with the fact that there could be 47 more of them. If you look at the proliferation of the open-pen salmon farms over the years, there is a possibility that the same thing could happen here.
With respect to your first comment, I hope the testimony you heard that they want to move towards it was correct. Closed containment has been an option for years to these companies as this debate raged on. Every comment I've read from them about closed containment is that it's not economical to do, number one, and that there's no reason to do it, number two, so if they don't believe the current practices are having an impact, then why would they put money into changing their location?