I'd be happy to. I can be briefer and take further questions if need be.
Just very quickly, the Atlantic Salmon Federation is truly a federation. We have provincial councils in Quebec and the four Atlantic provinces, under which there are 125 local river associations like the Hammond River Angling Association, the St. Mary's River Association, and so on and so forth. There's a lot of habitat restoration work, which is volunteer-driven.
A prime example would be on the West River of Sheet Harbour in Nova Scotia. The whole southwest coast of Nova Scotia has been decimated. The wild salmon population was decimated by acid rain. The Atlantic Salmon Federation, working with the Nova Scotia Salmon Association, has spent almost a million dollars, and then volunteer labour on top of that, on an acid rain mitigation project on the West River of Sheet Harbour. Since that project's been in place, the last six years we have seen each and every year a dramatic increase in both the insect life in the West River, and also the brook trout life, and the young salmon life as well. That is an example of a river that, right now, does not have a healthy salmon population, but it's on the rebound. In 10 or 15 or 20 years, it could support a lucrative recreational fishery. That's one example.
There are many other rivers in all five eastern provinces where the Atlantic Salmon Federation and our regional councils, volunteer-driven, are restoring habitat, making sure there are culverts under road construction and so on, streamside planting of willows so you don't have bank erosion, and many, many cases. The volunteer labour on top of the staff time runs into the many millions of dollars.