The challenges have been mostly around some of the stuff we talked about earlier insofar as trust. I think we are encountering a high degree of skepticism—from all parts of the country, it would seem. Certainly, in terms of the perception that people have of what DFO will do, we're encountering it at all corners. It's not any one segment of society. That has been, and is, a major challenge for us to deal with. It's one that I think the regulations are starting to begin to address, because we said to people, “Here's what we're planning to do”, and then the regulations say a lot of that. The real proof will be in the pudding, of course, when we start to administer it in 2011 going forward. I'm very confident that we'll do what we've said we will, but until we actually physically do it and people can see it, there will still be a bit of “I'm from Missouri” on this issue.
From the point of view of an opportunity, I think the biggest single one here is that we will substantially modernize the aquaculture management regime in British Columbia. It will be far more effective, far more efficient, way more transparent. This is the first piece of law that's been developed at the federal level specifically focused on aquaculture. Everything else, you use other tools to get at aquaculture, and to some considerable degree the same thing is true provincially. But this one is built specifically to deal with these circumstances. Today you have to have four provincial permits to conduct aquaculture. Going forward you'll have to have one. Today you have to have four federal permits, and going forward you'll have to have two. The taxpayer, I think, will save an awful lot of money, and we'll have decisions for or against sites and so on going forward in a much more efficient and effective way, I think.