I guess I'm the hard-core angler here. I spend more time chasing chinooks than probably anybody in this whole meeting.
Yes, again, there are potential negative impacts from a genetic perspective. What I would say, though, is that if you're going to have a fishery, every single chinook and every single coho should be marked, and there should be very clear discrimination.
The problem with hatcheries, again, is that they're sort of the crack cocaine of the fisheries world. You get addicted to them really easily, and you can end up with problems associated with weak stock harvests, which Carl Walters and all the UBC guys went through 30 or 40 years ago. It's just kind of a known thing.