Maybe I'll introduce something, and then I'll turn it over to the others.
Certainly, anything we can do to strengthen our ballast regulations and make sure that we're not going to get any new invasives through that vector would be helpful.
We've had great success. As Tim pointed out, we're in a situation now where that isn't the primary vector, and things are starting to shift. As things start to shift and we start to look at bait fish, we start to look at water garden industries and things. We start to look at an increasingly urban population that is, perhaps, not as in touch with the native flora and fauna of Ontario, and certainly a population that comes from many other countries and really has no awareness of the impact they may cause.
Even if they were aware that it causes an impact, how do we make them care? How do we make them support our actions and take more care? If you don't live beside a lake, perhaps you don't view a lake as important. You may live many orders of magnitude away from the lake itself but still within the watershed. What you do in a small stream in the upper reaches of the watershed can certainly impact what happens downstream and at the output of the stream and into the lake.
It's creating that awareness. It's certainly a difficult problem. Can we do it effectively? We believe the only way to do it is by engaging others, such as municipalities and other organizations, such key environmental groups, and the people who are closer to those communities and can reach out.
Ala, and Tim, do you have something to add?