Okay.
I think the simple solution to the problem is if we turn that “no” into a “yes”. That's just my humble opinion.
The reality is that I don't think, as wonderful as the testimony is today from everybody who's here, and despite the admiration and respect I have for people who are willing to push a piano up the stairs with a rope to try to create an industry and create a demand for seal and seal products in the face of insurmountable pressure on the international stage, and even domestically in certain parts of our country.... I have nothing but admiration and respect for everybody involved in this, but it is pushing a piano up the stairs with a rope. We have to, I think, come to the inevitable conclusion that we have to manage these things. These things are the wolves of the sea.
You've said that we need to study seal consumption so that we can actually accurately determine this—I have no idea why the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, which is responsible for science, wouldn't have a better understanding of that question—and that we have to have an “ecosystem-based approach”. If we're going to do that, we need to use the tools that are available to us.
Hunting is a very valuable part of wildlife management, and fishing is a part of wildlife management. It's a tool that can be used. As a matter of fact, it's not only a tool that can be used to help the Department of Fisheries and Oceans manage the population, but it actually generates revenue, generates income and creates tax revenue for the Government of Canada.
In fact, a hunter in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador—no different than a hunter in Alberta—would actually pay the government for the privilege of helping the government through the purchases of licences and tags. We would actually pay the government to help the government manage its wildlife population. I think we have a lot of work to do, not only when it comes to the seal industry but to hunting and fishing writ large, against the animal rights movement and those who pander to them, whether they do so all the time or even some of the time. I'm very frustrated by this.
I have another question for you. In your experience and knowledge, you're aware that there is a strike on right now in certain parts of the Government of Canada. Are the conservation and protection officers or the fisheries officers on strike right now?