I don't think a new name would help. It depends on the action. We need the resources; we need the people. There are many people who will give you way too much good advice, so you need people who can really sort those out. There was a good question earlier about a 1,000 random projects that were all worthwhile locally. They didn't add up to recovery. You need to be thinking in terms of a bigger picture about how to effectively utilize taxpayers' money to restore salmon. It's not going to be easy. You're going to have to be prepared for some failures.
You have to study the issue in the ocean. I'm sorry to keep harping on that, but all these comments about things have changed over time. It's not because hatcheries are doing something different, it's because the environment has changed, or it's because we didn't sustain the local estuary. In Campbell River, you built a marina on top of the most beautiful eelgrass bed I've ever seen in my life. It still didn't stop it. That sort of thing can't continue.
If there's a way to improve things, it may be to give the money to a group that's dedicated to restoration, and do the best thing for it. Get a group that's going to build from knowledge, work together and gain experience. Include people like Mr. Hauknes who has a sincere need for income, and understands the complexity of the fishery.
There are many people who will give you time to do this work. We have to do things a little differently. A friend of mine says if you don't look at what you're doing, you just keep doing the same old thing. That is not very wise management if it's failing.