Well, I wish I knew what will be in the budget on Monday. I hear there's an investment in wild salmon. I'm sure it will be very warmly received. Whether it's going to be adequate or not is, I think, another question, because I actually don't know anyone who has had input to the development of that amount of money.
The amount of money that is required has to involve a long-term commitment, and it will be substantial. There is no point in really hiding that. You have heard examples from each of us about all the things that could be done and the problems. There are many things to deal with.
I'm a commissioner for Canada for the Pacific Salmon Treaty, so I deal with Mr. Hauknes' issue about the allocation among various areas and the regulation.
We have lots of great people to know what to do. The problem is that we don't have great data. We need a commitment to understanding what is really going on. We heard about the DNA sampling. We have been doing that for a long period of time, but it doesn't build on the abundance of salmon. We have to do other things.
What we're finding is that the reliance on hatcheries is something we're going to have to look at very carefully, because I think the big unknown in salmon is—