I don't know if that's possible. What I can do is refer you, if you have paper copies of my deck, to page 8, figure 3. This is for habitat enforcement and compliance. Essentially what we see is that in...again, there are matters of scale here with this figure, but of course if the figure started at 2012, what you would see is a reduction from roughly 75 warnings being issued per year and enforcement activity in the sense of charges in the single digits, to 50 to five warnings and zero charges.
What I can say about what that means is that when governments want people to follow laws, then they enforce them. When there is no enforcement, then there is no compliance with the law. I'll give you the example of speeding. We have speeding signs all over every city, and yet individuals speed all the time. We have police officers there to remind individuals financially that there are consequences to going too fast. It is untenable to suggest that, at this level of enforcement, this prohibition against the impacts of fish habitat is being taken seriously.