Okay.
I'll move to another topic. As I think you saw in the news lately, a lot of the crab licences from my area in northern New Brunswick that were being sold left the region. Those licences are worth $10 million, $12 million or $15 million now. Most of that is because of a ruling that you have to be a resident of New Brunswick for only six months, for example. A couple of years ago—I think Mr. MacPherson is online from P.E.I.—there was a licence bought from a 24-year-old from P.E.I. DFO said they checked everything and everything was according to the law, blah, blah, blah.
Do you think there's enough done by DFO officials to monitor those kinds of transactions? We're seeing that in crab right now, with those licences worth millions of dollars, but in lobster, licences here can be worth close to $1 million or $1.5 million.
Do you think there's enough done, Ms. Sonnenberg or Mr. MacPherson, about the monitoring by DFO officials? Do you think we need some change in those residency rules or other rules? Do you think a committee should be put in place to get to the bottom of this and make sure that those licences stay within the community? The spirit of the new Fisheries Act, and the regulations we put in place on owner-operator and fleet separation, is to keep those licences within the community. If we have all those licences leaving, what are we going to do?
We're talking about Royal Greenland here, but I'll bet we can talk about Champlain investments and other groups of companies who also want to buy that. Do you think we have some work to be done here by DFO officials and by our government—I'm sure they'll want to look at it—with maybe a committee put in place?
That's for Ms. Sonnenberg or Mr. MacPherson, whoever wants to go first.