Here, and in Scotland, too. In fact, there are things that we do here that they don't do in Scotland yet. We do them much better--area management fallowing. Our whole industry is divided that way here, and it isn't in Scotland. I think we have a lot to be proud of in terms of how our industry is run here, but also how it's regulated.
I think moving away from the salmon rivers may sound like a great idea, but you have to first decide why you are doing it. Is it necessary? You talked about the canary in the coal mine. Let's look at what the reality is. What's happening that's different?
The decline of Atlantic salmon in the area where we farm started long before we were there. It's that topic we had earlier. Simply because two things happen near each other doesn't mean one is the cause of the other. Before the federal government asks the industry to do something, it should do the analysis. Is this really required? Is it going to make a difference?
If you moved all the salmon farms off the east coast of Canada, would the wild salmon come back?