Thanks, Mr. Chair.
The conservation and protection officers have a multitude of responsibilities in their functions that include certainly law enforcement-type activities but also various other activities, such as marine mammal response, the Canadian shellfish sanitation program and habitat enforcement. The role of a C and P officer is diverse and broad.
Specifically related to the concerns we've heard recently from some C and P officers related to dangers that may be present in their working environment, we are working with Labour Canada, with our officers themselves and with other advisers in order to put in place a variety of additional tools that will increase the safety of the officers' activities as well as other training elements to further mitigate the risks that are inherent in what those officers are doing.
Your other question was related to enforcement, in particular in southwest Nova Scotia. As is the case anywhere, there is a period of time when there's an enhanced focus on on-the-ground enforcement activities. We certainly deploy the local resources in a manner that prioritizes that specific issue or enforcement activity. In addition to that, we do work with C and P divisions in other parts of the country to reassign officers temporarily in order to augment the presence. That's something we've done again this year and have done in previous years as well.
We also work with other government agencies, including the Canada Revenue Agency, RCMP, FINTRAC and others, in order to use the resources across the federal family, as well as in partnership with the province. The provinces, of course, have responsibility on the processing sector side and in the enforcement, licensing and permitting capacity there as well. Our objective is to work in concert with all those other enforcement agencies so that we interrupt the overall process of unauthorized activity from the water to the marketplace in order to reduce the benefits that illegal activity can provide to those who are engaged in it.