I'd like to give you five points in response. I'll do it as quickly as I can.
First of all, this was an extraordinarily high increase, a bloom. The northern shrimp fishery existed at lower levels for decades before this bloom happened. We had this very high increase, and now it's coming back to normal. It's not a situation like the northern cod, where we had an environmental problem. We overfished it collectively and we drove it down with some environmental changes to help. It's not that situation at all. It's not the fault of the Government of Canada, or any scientist, or any fisheries manager. It's not the fishing industry's fault. This was a bloom that occurred, and the bloom is now gone, so we can place it in that context.
Secondly, I should say that the issue of job loss is inevitable. It's absolutely inevitable. I think you put your finger on it. It's about how this is going to be done, not whether or if it's going to be done. I note that on the issue of adjacency you've mentioned, I've tried to make the point in the opening statement that we are adjacent to this resource. Virtually all of the vessels are running out of Newfoundland. Most of the crew, by far, are from Newfoundland and Labrador, so that's—