The simple answer is that Canada is a maritime country, but we have what's called seawater blindness. The central agencies, particularly the political elites, do not understand how much of the maritime domain of Canada is actually at the heart of both our security and our prosperity.
It takes a political decision to turn around and come up with a type of creation of an overview. Once again, it could be put under the czar that Elinor talked about. We need to break this political blindness to know how important the oceans and the oceans' resources are to Canada. I'm getting to be old at this, but I'm always shocked at how much Canadians, particularly central Canadians, forget the importance that we have and, therefore, are not willing to engage in the type of study that would establish the type of structure we would then need. The Japanese do it pretty easily. The Americans do it, and the British do it in a much more expanded way. I don't know why we can't.