Yes, that's where we're at. For this resource, we're probably looking at some $30 million or $40 million worth of resource in the areas I represent. They're small communities. There's nothing else there to attract industry other than that resource. The value of that resource, the ownership of it, the quotas—we call it allocation—and then the access to it, which is the ability or the licence to catch it, which are two different things.... We have to maintain the value of that resource in order to finance our communities and keep them there, because that's the only source of independent income and sustenance we have.
That's come under threat. There are corporations, of course, that would like to buy the resource, just like any other resource, like oil or anything else. It's valuable, and it's only going to get more valuable. We appreciate that.