Mr. Taylor, I'll engage you on this a little bit. The other day Mr. Stringer talked about Bill C-38, and Mr. Kamp referred to it before. It will take effect when the Governor in Council decides it will take effect. The January 1 deadline was one the department had kind of set for itself, which is obviously good, for government to set a target.
The three areas they were talking about were, one, information requirements for an authorization; two, the timelines; and three, aquatic invasive species. Those are the three very limited regulatory things they're actually doing right now.
He also stated:
With respect to the other regulations, there is a set that we would anticipate going forward with. They are not required,
—at least initially—but they would probably come later and would also be subject to public engagement.
So to your comment of June 1 as being another date, I think it's important to recognize that there is significant other consultation that will have to happen.
Just as a question on this, and on some of the testimony Mr. Stringer gave to the Senate committee, going back when I was younger in the seventies and eighties when I used to fish the Nashwaak River, the St. John River, and the Miramichi River, obviously there was quite a number of salmon and other species at that point in time. I've seen generally over the years that we might have a bumper year in some cases, as we did last year in the Miramichi—not so great this year—but we've had some good years. But generally in the other rivers—I use the Nashwaak as an example because there is not a dam there from that standpoint—we've seen these go down.
Mr. Stringer talked about the Fisheries Act and called for a regime to protect Canada's commercial, recreational, and aboriginal fisheries; provide protection from serious harm; address managing threats to these fisheries from challenges to habitat, aquatic invasive species, and other threats; and provide enhanced tools for the compliance, and also the partnerships agreement.
I guess when you look at an act from 1868, it seems to me that hasn't worked very well for us and that some of these changes, in terms of focusing on the fish, would be better.
I'd just ask for your comment on that.