Certainly. Thank you very much.
The distinction is an important one, because right now, with the focus on individual fish as opposed to supporting the fishery, we find ourselves in a very different situation than we were in previously.
When there is what we refer to as an incidental take—when fish are killed—it is a bad day for my member companies. They have always sought to make sure they operate in a manner that limits that, but they also take action to mitigate those sorts of things by building facilities that now have fish passages, for example. There are a number of examples of that. We have fish hatchery programs. We have habitat enhancement that takes place. In all those cases, the mitigation measures are more than making up for the incidental take—the fish that are killed as a result of our operations.
That doesn't work under the current regime. Under the current regime, we're supposed to be protecting the individual fish as opposed to the overall fishery. For a number of our facilities, we're unable to get those FAAs because fish are being killed, even though the mitigation measures more than make up for that, and that is a problem.