I do know—you were speaking about that before—that for all of the wind lease areas they do only an environmental assessment and they do only an individual assessment. They don't do any sort cumulative study.
That's different from the environmental impact statement. That goes through a full EIS process with a draft and comments throughout and involves an act that we call the NEPA, which is the national environmental protection act. They do the leases with only an EA, with only basically the idea that “we're going to put a buoy out there and we're going to do some work here and we'll let you know”. There's no point in the process where as fishermen we can say, “Wait a minute—these are active grounds.”
BOEM is the lead on any of this regulatory environment, so even if the National Marine Fisheries Service said, “Don't do this here because it's important, because it's a central fish habitat”, or whatever, they would not allow it.