I believe DFO does not have the authority to remedy what I hear you speak of in terms of overlap. They're there to discuss fisheries. Where they run into difficulties is with the migratory nature of many salmon and other fisheries.
To be very transparent, I've pushed really hard for years for our tribal council to get an aboriginal aquatic resource and oceans management body. We were unsuccessful and I wonder how many others were unsuccessful. I've become very aware of many first nations that don't want one.
The DFO has a practice now—and I'm talking about their practice—of only turning to AAROM bodies for direction, so they're making a conscious and systemic exclusion of first nations that are not part of those particular silos. They're actually working to ensure that there is no unity among first nations. They reward ones they have agreements with and they ask others to bear the infringement of their rights based on somebody else's opinion.