Thank you, Mr. Chair.
It's great to see the witnesses here. It's always good to see my fellow colleagues.
My first question is for you, Ms. Glynn. I think this may be our last session of this particular study. We've talked to a broad cross-section of people, from government to NGOs to fish harvesters to processors, and we all agree that a lot has been invested in small craft harbours but a lot more needs to be, based on Fiona and other Fionas to come. When I have someone like you and our other witness here, I'd be remiss if I didn't ask you this. When we talk about “future-proofing” and “build back better”, what does that mean to practitioners like you? Can you give us some insight? If you had x dollars tomorrow, where would you start with a particular harbour? Where would you start with a particular process operation that's close by the water?
Mr. Warris, I'll be coming to you with the same type of question.
So where would you start, Ms. Glynn? Let's unpack the term “future-proofing” for a second. From your perspective at the FFAW, what does that mean to small craft harbours? What does that mean to inshore fishers? What does that mean to processing units?