If I could follow up on that, I really think, as I said in my opening statement, that the response by the federal government in 1999 and the agreements that were reached then addressed the issues. We've had a very peaceful, co-operative commercial fishery that's profitable for everybody.
Personally—and I know I will get some feedback on this—I don't see the need for this second competing fishery, and I see it as a competing fishery. That has a lot of implications and potential problems attached to it. I think the FSC fishery was put in there to address the culture and traditions of the indigenous people so that they could have their own recognition for that, and it recognizes their right.
As far as the moderate livelihood goes, there certainly is enough access within the commercial fishery there for first nations to provide the moderate livelihood as well as the rest of it, so I don't see the purpose of setting up this second commercial fishery.
You have to understand that the fishing industry partners with DFO, with conservation and protection and science and hydrographic work. They do a lot of work. If we get a second fishery and it becomes a competing fishery, and I'm talking about non-compliance.... When we talk about the FSC fishery, I think that has been demonstrated. There has been a lot of testimony to the fact that there has been a lot of extracurricular and illicit fishery taking place under the cover of that.
We're running into a problem now with the sale...because there can't be any sale of that. A second commercial fishery will provide an avenue for the sale of an illicit fishery. I don't mean any disrespect by that. The FSC fishery is more or less the first nation fishery, but the commercial fishery has to remain under a single regulator, under a single set of regulations for marketing, and would provide better relations in the long run. That's my opinion.
I think that the federal government is getting to the point where if there can't be some kind of agreement, they are going to have to enforce the regulations that are in place now, and the agreement that's acceptable.... I'm not going to suggest whether this isn't a legal fishery or it is a legal fishery. I'm suggesting that there is a very fine line there whether it's a legal fishery or not.
I think that we have to have a single fishery, and I think the federal government is going to have to have the authority to implement that and regulate it.