No, I don't. I think what's happened in the last two years is more than has happened in marine protection in Canada in the last 150. It's happened very quickly. A lot of resources have gone into it, but attention to process.... We really do need to dig down into that as we lead up to 2020, both for indigenous communities and coastal communities and having a real sense of the why of marine protection. Again, I did just come from Labrador and I cannot tell you how important it is to make sure there's marine protection so there's food security for those communities. It is incredibly important.
I see what's happening on the eastern shore of Nova Scotia right now where there is a willingness to really consider how the communities engage in conservation. They've done amazing work on protecting 100 wild islands. The community is fully on board. They're ready and open, and broad stakeholders are open, to getting engaged, but right now, despite our pushing for a real meaningful bottom-up process and a bit of funding for our marine conservation working group, there hasn't been a lot of openness to that from DFO. There hasn't been not openness, but I would say that as we move to the coast and as we move toward a nation-to-nation relationship, we need to have adequate funding for that process and we will be the better for it.