I'm not sure if they're so different, but we have a land claims agreement that lays out an allocation system and a management system and the recognition of Inuit systems of wildlife management and so on, which we try our best to rely upon. But you have to have implementation legislation to make that all flow smoothly and for all parties to follow. That is one of our concerns with the Fisheries Act, as well as, which Mr. Andrews mentioned, the regulations, which give you much more specific details. We've worked as hard as we can for the last 16 years, without success, to try to get Nunavut fishery regulations in place, and so far, we've come up empty-handed.
We have a lot of those details that you're asking about in our land claims agreement. What we seek is an act that implements that, that is in line with the land claims agreement, which, of course, is protected by the Constitution, as I mentioned earlier. We very much seek that next level, which has been discussed a couple of times, the development of appropriate regulations flowing from the act.