No, it's not being accepted. On the Atlantic coast, there would be tremendous resistance to the idea of the licence not being an asset. I think it could be considered in British Columbia in the short term as a transition or as a strategy in a much smaller fishery that is not in as strong a position as the Atlantic fishery is right now. In a perfect world, I would see the Atlantic industry also considering this transition on a long-term basis.
I'm very concerned, with the continuing growth in the value of the licence, about how it will be possible in the future to maintain an owner-operator fishery on the Atlantic coast. That's in terms of the cost, the value of the enterprise and the ability of the people who grow up in the community as working crew to ever own an enterprise. We've seen fisheries in the United States where it's long past the point where a working fish harvester could ever become an enterprise owner, just because of the value of the enterprise. I would like to see a consideration of—