Well, as I said in my talk, I didn't reference the Aichi targets directly, but they are not being met currently in Canada, the target being 17% of the land base and then also a restoration of 15% of the degraded land base by 2020.
The current system of parks and wildlife areas is good, in that it represents the different ecozones of the country. What our membership constituents are concerned about is land that is within reach of a five-minute or ten-minute walk in a rural area that is potentially going to be under a subdivision in the future. So there are areas that are close to home. They're not up in the vast beyond that no one ever goes to or sees.
I would say that the land trust community is a relatively new community that needs as much support as it can get. We are trying to support the individual voluntary actions of citizens to protect lands within their communities, to keep their communities livable, walkable, to have a sense of place, and to maintain community character where perhaps there are watercourses or working waterfronts involved.