Thank you for that.
I should point out I confess I'm guilty of including agriculture into the industry groups. But the Canadian Federation of Agriculture and the Canadian Nursery Landscape Association were participants in the minister's round table, and I think we'll treat them as a separate category in the future.
I think you raise a really good point and a really key point: that in terms of connecting natural spaces you're doing it in areas where people live and where people work and where people produce. I think one of the benefits for us is that a promising opportunity of the natural conservation plan is figuring out the collaborative arrangements whereby you can work with those stakeholders and figure out a way together where sometimes very small adjustments or changes, or just being aware of factors, can create a more conducive natural habitat.
I think one of the interesting things, and it's a great sort of contrast.... I was in Hamilton looking at Randle Reef, which is a contaminated sediment area that we're trying to pull together in a tripartite solution for the Great Lakes. Around the corner is Cootes Paradise, and then there's the Cootes to escarpment area, where a whole bunch of people have come together voluntarily and landowners have made marginal changes to how they manage their properties, which has created a natural ecosystem much more conducive to habitat. I think it's a great success story along the lines of what you're describing.