My view is that politics and fisheries don't mix very well, and there's a need for a separation of politics from fisheries. That's exactly the purpose of a joint management board, to try to take the politics out of it, because there are so many occasions that are beyond counting as to how many decisions were taken that were injurious to the stocks, and perhaps even injurious to the politics as well at the same time.
With the offshore petroleum board, we have a good example of a joint management process that seems to have worked extremely well, where the two governments, the provincial government and the federal government, have worked together and the politics have, in fact, been largely taken out of it. I think it's been to the benefit of the Government of Canada and the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador—and all Canadians.