Thank you, Minister. With all respect, perhaps I can link back to the second half of that question, and I look forward to a response on that from you.
Minister, we were talking earlier about a very spiritual experience and the honour we felt to be participating in a salmon dance recently in the Tsleil-Waututh First Nation and Wild First salmon alliance gathering, where we heard from chiefs across British Columbia who spoke to both of us about their desire to get open-net fish farms out of the water and to remove them from the critical migration routes. They want to see a shift to land-based closed containment and a transition plan for impacted communities.
We've heard testimony from Dr. Andrew Bateman, who clearly testified that the CSAS process, the Canadian Science Advisory Secretariat process, is far from objective and is industry-influenced. The vast majority of science around the fish industry states very contrary outcomes to what we're seeing around CSAS.
We also have the precautionary principle, which is meant for scenarios exactly like the one we're seeing with the fish farms today.
Minister, are you going to err on the side of caution and respond and act on the vast majority of B.C. first nation food security concerns, or will you and your department continue to support multinational companies that continue to profit from damaging Canada's environment and wild salmon stocks?