Fortunately, just last month Minister Kent was in Toronto to kick off the consultation process on the Rouge Valley urban national park. We certainly received a lot of ideas. We started with a small group of people who had been highly dedicated to the Rouge Valley over the past 20 or 25 years. All levels of government, I would like to say, and all parties as well, participated, and some fantastic ideas came out of that.
As you said, it's a great park in its nearness to a population, one could say, of 10 million to 12 million people. We really look at it as an opportunity to give Canadians in that area the opportunity to explore not just the Rouge Valley but all of Canada.
Some of the concepts coming out of this include how we can have a centre in that park that deals with our entire country from coast to coast to coast, with all of the national treasures and all of the things people can get out and do, and bring that as a real focal point to the sense of Canada. What's being discussed is it being a real people's park, with a people focus, and one of those people focuses is very much about that sense of Canada or the very essence of being a Canadian.