Perhaps it's my jet lag.
I think each of the fisheries is assessed with our co-management bodies, and we work on a co-management plan. So the plan, depending on the fishery—if it's in the western Arctic, in the areas that would come under the Fisheries Joint Management Committee, we would work with them; they would use our science, and we would use their traditional knowledge. We would work with the local hunter-trapper organizations. We would develop a sustainable plan. It would be discussed with the various communities, and we'd get their input. We'd determine what the harvest level would be, and then that would be prosecuted and we'd go forward.
We do the same thing in Cumberland Sound with the inshore fisheries.
When we get to the NAFO kind of fishery, there's a different process. Blair is probably more comfortable with that than I am and could speak to the vagaries of how those arrangements are put in place. As I said in my remarks, theirs are shared with multiple regions, so it's more than just the region I have accountability for.
Blair.