Mr. Morrissey, you're absolutely right. In my own constituency—and you have a long experience on Prince Edward Island with the agricultural community—we've heard their concerns. We share their concerns. We're seeking to protect fish and fish habitat. We're not seeking to provide inadvertently some undue regulatory or legislative regime on agricultural practices.
There may be the very rare circumstances where there's an overlap or where there's an intersection. I've heard anecdotal examples, we all have, and sometimes it might be a lack of judgment or common sense on the part of a particular enforcement officer or person who perhaps didn't have what he or she thought was the sufficient authority to come up with an appropriate solution. I mean some of it can be good faith human error or human judgment errors, but in some cases, if there's a legislative provision that would allow something that would appear completely unreasonable to take shape, then that would not be something that we would condone or we would want to see.
I think we would benefit, and I said that I thought this in response to Mr. Sopuck, from your committee's advice on how exactly we square that circle. You have experience, and Mr. Finnigan ran a business called Mr. Tomato in New Brunswick for a long time, including in my constituency. There is a lot of experience at this table with respect to agricultural issues. We would benefit from your wisdom on that, as well.