I think the opportunity is still there. The collaboration varies with the particular question and the time.
We in science now generally talk about an activity called citizen science. There are multiple levels of this now because the first nations don't want to be considered citizen science. They have their own science opportunities. We have a number of scientific communities that really need to collaborate with some of these things. The department cannot collect data at the micro-scales that citizen scientists can. First nations, in this case, can collect data in very specific locations.
I think the information you were talking about, Bob, was really referring to work around the Strait of Georgia and Juan de Fuca. We call it the Salish Sea.
I'll give you a really great example of how powerful involving communities can be. If you do a government survey of this Strait of Georgia, it's a 10-day survey sampling 80 sites. If we use citizen science by engaging community people with vessels, we sample the entire Strait of Georgia with the same number of sites, in a single day. The opportunity there is that we can do multiple samplings, and we can sample it at a time and space scale that is impossible using large vessels. There are all sorts of opportunities for these collaborations.