Thank you, and welcome to the witnesses.
By the way, I sympathize with Mr. Chisholm. I find these time limits are very difficult.
First of all, I have learned a lot from your presentation today. I appreciate it.
I want to start with something and make sure I understand it correctly.
Mr. Stuart Wuttke, the general counsel of the Assembly of First Nations, on November 8 made a statement, which the Library of Parliament has reported for us as follows, with regard to clause 173:
...the prohibition against seines, nets, weirs, or other fish appliances that obstruct “more than two thirds of the width of any river or stream or more than one third of the width of the main channel at low tide of any tidal stream”, may result in the infringement of first nation rights.
I was quite concerned about that because I thought he was saying that the amendment in clause 173 might result in the infringement of first nations rights. Now what I've heard you say this morning is that in fact the prohibition against blocking more than two-thirds of a river has been in place since the 1920s. Is that correct? When I heard you say that, I looked it up. Section 26 of the act before the 2012 amendments contains exactly that prohibition.
I have to conclude that either Mr. Wuttke didn't know about that or else maybe he didn't realize that we were here to just talk about what the amendment in clause 173 was doing. But I found his comment to be very misleading in light of what you've opened my eyes to this morning. I want to thank you for that.
I want to pursue it a little further. As a non-fisheries person, I've been trying to understand the complexities of this. I think I'm getting it now. First of all, the amendment in clause 173 seems to combine the previous prohibition in section 26, against blocking one-third, with section 29, against unduly obstructing the passage of fish. Now we have combined in section 29 both of those ideas. Is that fair enough to say for a start? I know it does other things too.