I could add one thing in particular to that. I mentioned how we need to have a firm mandate on negotiating fish. I mentioned we have all these studies that have been going on forever, and that has made it difficult to have a mandate on fish.
In January 2010, then Minister Strahl came to the principals' tables--the principals being the province, the first nations, and the federal government--with a position on carving out, and he used that language, “carve out”, the fish so we could finalize agreements and we would carve out fish. It's always going to depend on the fish. It's not going to depend on us how much fish is going to be out there; it depends on how much fish is available. It's one that is better served if it is fluid.
So we have this carve-out language, and we were very supportive of that. Unfortunately, we've never seen the carve-out language hit a table, and this is 16 or 18 months later. So where's that carve-out language? Get it to the table.
It's the same thing...we have recognition language that has gone to one or two tables that we know of. Why isn't that made available? It goes back maybe, David, to your question about transparency and about clarity, that when you have that language--and when it's recommended we're going to have that language--it's made available so the negotiators can start dealing with it.