Well, that would be conjecture, to begin with. Certainly we're always evaluating, and there are ways to obtain information on the Atlantic fishery, not only through DFO but also through other organizations, like ACOA. They do analyses of the fishery on the east coast of Canada. That's one example. There are ways we can ascertain the impacts. We're slipping in our export ranking, which is not a good sign. If we don't do anything, we're not going to have a fishery.
Young people aren't entering the fishery. It's getting more and more difficult for them to get involved. They're voting with their boots, so to speak, and they're heading west, where they can make a good dollar. A lot of them are not prepared to live a life where they're just making a minimal wage.
We have to ensure that we can grow that area. We have to make sure we have people to work in our fish plants, and that's becoming a problem. We have an aging workforce, and we are having great difficulties in attracting people to work in the fish plants. In the southeastern part of my province, they have to bring in 200 people a year because they can't get people to work in the fish plants. There are some major concerns we have to worry about if we're going to have a fishery for the future.