I've not had the pleasure of dealing with the southern management of fisheries. All my experience has been in the central and Arctic regions. We have a cooperative and integrated approach. I sit on a committee—a formal governance body—that we have established under the land claim with the Government of Nunavut, the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board. It is our co-management partner, as well as NTI, which is the commercial and representative organization of the beneficiaries.
We have established our priorities for addressing the fisheries, and we work on those with an integrated approach. During the last few years, our focus has been on establishing an integrated fisheries management plan for narwhal. We are focusing our work on establishing basic need levels across all of the fisheries, and we are looking at the future as those works are starting to come to a conclusion. We're going to be working on establishing Nunavut fisheries regs. This work, done with our co-management partners, will allow for a made-in-Nunavut set of regulations, as opposed to the present regulations, which were established for the Northwest Territories.
So everything is done in a cooperative fashion. We have formal meetings twice a year. We have informal meetings. I have a director of northern operations who is in the Arctic and works with our co-management partners on a daily basis on all of the issues.