Yes. I will also admit that I'm not an expert in this particular area, but I do know that over the years it was a significant issue for Yukon River chinook. The practices improved. There were observers. There were various things that they did to ensure that those catches were minimized. My understanding is that they have crept up again, so this is something that we're always trying to work on and make sure that we advocate for.
I think there are some significant high-seas issues that the Yukon and Alaska, Canada and the U.S., can align together on—this area of fishery, which is something that Chief Rhonda Pitka brought forward.
Again, it is one of those things that we have control over. It is very much salt in the wound, in that there are still some of these high-seas commercial fisheries taking place while all subsistence fishers on the Yukon River in Alaska and the Yukon are.... In principle, that in itself is probably the deepest wound that we're dealing with, and frankly it's quite offensive to everyone on the in-river who's not able to fish.