Well, to be quite honest, we've been dealing with that labour shortage for a considerable period of time.
To give you an example of the people from Nova Scotia who are out in Alberta, a lot of those guys were people who would fish in the stern of a lobster boat this time of year. You can see the wind and weather out there. Fifteen years ago they'd have been out today; they wouldn't have been tied up. Thankfully, safety has come first.
Those guys could make $85,000 a year in 50 to 60 days' work. Given the way the economy's gone, the price of lobster, the value of the U.S. dollar.... The U.S. dollar is what we deal with in fish. That is the currency. All of those factors come in. That $85,000-a-year job now pays $25,000. It's a no-brainer. If we start having a way to increase the value for the products we export—and in Nova Scotia, fish is number one; it's simple—that would increase the value of those jobs, and we should start to see retention of our young people in coastal communities.
I come from a town whose median age dropped by 10 years over the course of five. I'm one of the rare ones of the people I went to high school with—I came home. I'm not working somewhere else.