It would be a pleasure.
In terms of compliance or any attempts to smuggle contraband fish, seafood, etc., into or out of Canada—for import or export—there is not necessarily a high volume. We have not noticed a significant threat of late.
Through our national targeting centre, we run different types of targeting models that are very much designed to catch these types of illicit or nefarious activities. For the most part, those have largely surfaced administrative non-compliance. We have not noticed any real patterns of shipping or illegal shipping.
In addition, we enforce a variety of partner-department target requests. That would be the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or Fisheries and Oceans Canada requesting that the CBSA examine goods due for export or potentially for import. In such cases, we are very diligent and quickly respond to partner-department requests. In those cases, we have not necessarily seen a pattern or trend.
That does not necessarily negate the fact that illegal, unregulated or unreported fishing is occurring. However, at the ports of export, we would say that we're not necessarily noting a pattern or trend that is problematic. I would say the same thing for import, but that requires the crossing of an international border and does not negate that this might be a local, municipal or regional issue that is obviously affecting many Canadians.