Okay.
Could you take us through the process by which a species is listed? You've touched on it, but maybe you could give us an example of how a species is being listed, how the habitat or the recovery planning would happen, and then how you would let the public know. It could be the provincial, territorial, or federal government that would be managing it, but let's assume for our discussion that it is federal, that it is a species that has been listed, and that there's a recovery. How do you notify the public that this is now a critical habitat so that the public knows?
The reason I ask this is that I had a photographer come into my office who had set up a blind and was taking pictures. He damaged some of the habitat—he took down a rosebush—and got into big trouble. He was not aware that it was critical habitat for a species. That is why my question is relevant.
The government has seen that if you have legislation you must have an enforcement component of it, too, if it is to be successfully used to protect the habitat and protect the species. The government made a commitment a couple of years ago and, as of about a year ago, we have a lot of new environmental officers out there.
So again, I think the question that is very important is this one. We want to make SARA practical and effective to protect species that need protection, but how does that process happen and how do we notify the general public that this is an area that is off limits for certain activities?