Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses.
I would like to echo our colleagues. We've had some quality submissions today, with a lot of food for thought for the committee as we review the Species at Risk Act and whether there should be potential changes.
Time is of the essence when it comes to protecting species at risk, obviously, and there are a lot of implementation bumps along the way. We're trying to look at how we get faster action on the ground, so to speak. Of course, that brings with it I think what we've heard at this committee an awful lot: some of the conflicts come into play.
I think Mr. Woodworth was heading in a pretty important direction. Science has a role to play,and at the end of the day, the government of course has a balance of interests beyond that. There are obligations that the crown has, treaty obligations, and if you're looking at compensation issues for a farmer, we could be looking at WTO obligations, for example, because presumably that would be a yearly compensation that farmer. There are also constitutional considerations in our relationships with other levels of government.
So how do we balance the socio-economics and those types of things with getting faster action on the ground? How do we make it more efficient?
One of the other things we're facing is the request from a number of stakeholders for more input, which it seems would add more time to the process, theoretically.
Mr. Mooers, I'm going to ask you a question, because you were talking about what you affectionately called “COREWIC”, where there would be a scientific panel or input with respect to the draft recovery strategies and action plans. Is there a concern? Can you talk me through how that would lead to faster action on the ground, if that's possible? Or is there concern that it could add time to a process that already seems slow? Is there any concern there or should we have some concern about that?