Yes, indeed. Well, you can build houses on private property inside Gatineau Park. You can't drink in Gatineau Park, but you can drink in a national park—beer or wine. That's a problem, if you can keep building houses. How many properties in Gatineau Park have 100 acres, 200 acres? There's the Radmore Farm, there's the Dufour property at Kingsmere, there are properties that are ready to be developed.
If you develop property within a park, perforce you're creating pressure within the park, which will ultimately keep the people out. At Meech Lake you have houses all along the shoreline, which deny the people enjoyment of their lake.
They expropriated the francophones at Lac Philippe in 1954. Major General Howard Kennedy, who was chairman of the Federal District Commission, had a property, or his wife had a property, at Kingsmere Lake, and he advocated expropriation everywhere in Ottawa, for the greenbelt, for instance, and for the francophones up at Lac Philippe. The people at Meech Lake and Kingsmere, at the time—now the population proportion is probably about fifty-fifty English and French—allowed expropriation of the French. The people who had good parliamentary contacts and social contacts and legal contacts, well, they got to stay. As a francophone, I find that shocking. I'm appalled by that.
Sorry, I might have skated around the question—