It's certainly not an easy exercise. For the Restigouche-Albert region, the one you're referring to, we did propose a few amendments.
As we know, the Moncton region has grown since 2000. Basically, the people who live in that part of the Restigouche-Albert region are connected to the job market in the Moncton region. The reality there is different from that of northern New Brunswick.
There would be a way to adjust that. Obviously, you're right in that having too many small regions is a bad idea. The previous government started that by creating one region for Charlottetown and another for the rest of Prince Edward Island. That created a precedent that could be used to delineate small regions.