I think that, specifically as it relates to IUU, it needs to be focused on the ground. Admin time and spending time in an office does not help to get a presence out on the river or out on the ocean. You're going to need people in the field who are out and engaging fishers and talking to them.
The other part is outreach: building relationships with the public, stakeholders and first nations, and talking about sustainability and things like the app and encouraging people to use it.
In British Columbia and all across the country, you have hundreds of thousands of sets of eyes—if not millions—that are passionate about this resource. Having relationships with those members of the public, Canadians and first nations so they go out to be your eyes and ears is critically important.
I would say that getting officers on the ground so they can have a presence and they can do their jobs, and, secondly, building relationships with Canadians so they can be the eyes and ears are two of the functions that would be really important as it relates to C and P and IUU.