It's a community-based, volunteer, non-profit program.
To address some of the comments that Mr. Cobb just made, it is true that it's a tangled issue to get into fishing. You have the provincial level, and then the federal levels—Transport Canada, Industry Canada. Then you have FFAW and PFHCB telling you what you can do to fish.
Young people are looking at a minimum—a million is really high—of $250,000 to get started, and as he said, six to eight years of training and then sea time. They're looking at that, and they see that as payment for an entire house. As for six to eight years, they're thinking that's graduate school. It becomes, as he said, quite onerous. A small inshore fishery boat for young people to get started.... Back in the day, they could push out a 22-foot boat and handline fish.
You also have to have some way to deal with them being able to market it as any individual business person could. That requires getting the province to come on side and reduce some of the policies on how they can market their fish and be able to ship it out of Newfoundland, too, which again is a provincial issue.