Okay. I'll speak up.
I certainly agree with you that the solutions lie inside our communities when it comes to long-term solutions in our communities, but I would also say that Canada is a big country. As much as we do have some things in common, regions have different challenges. On the west coast, not to take away from anybody else, they've been in the news for drug-related things with the government. There's a little bit more access to drugs there, in Vancouver in particular. In the prairies we have a similar situation.
Of course, in your community and across this country, there are those things, but one unique aspect of the east coast is that treaty rights and fishery rights have been in the news, of course, over the last decades. When it comes to moderate living and livelihood, fishing with elver fishers, treaty rights and traditional rights, and balancing those with the Canadian economy and non-indigenous Canadians who work on the east coast, I'm wondering how the RCMP has handled that situation. Have things gotten better under the RCMP? Do they work in a peaceful way? Are things getting better with the RCMP when it comes to moderate fishery livelihoods?
