I guess you used my name, so I'll jump in first.
If a violation occurs, a fisheries officer goes out and does an investigation. He then takes it to the FFHPP—the fish and fish habitat protection program—and those guys have to make a decision with regard to whether a charge takes place or not. On top of that, those guys do what's known as a triage, and they say, “That's unlikely to win in court. That's unlikely to be able to be addressed. Okay, we'll pick this one.”
The very notion of a triage says to me that the department is so understaffed with regard to habitat protection and habitat mitigation and resolution that.... It's easy for me to say that more money and more resources have to go into the agency, but I can't see any other way around it unless more support capacity is thrown at these really egregious issues.