I tried to take some notes to include all of your questions.
Thank you. To address your first point about wetlands for tomorrow and whether any of the funding we raised was spent in urban areas, the answer is absolutely, yes. We did a number of large projects in the Vancouver area—in Surrey. We also did a number of habitat projects right in the city of Montreal, and a number of interpretative centres, which were more like boardwalks in urban wetlands, in Edmonton, Calgary, and Saskatoon. Fredericton has an interpretive centre as well.
When you're talking about having conservation within urban areas, one of the things you may not be familiar with is something that Ducks Unlimited is involved with, particularly in Winnipeg, through a segment of our organization called native plant solutions. It works with developers to naturalize stormwater ponds. They provide the functionality of a stormwater pond, but they look like a natural wetland. That gives the ability to educate urban audiences about the functions of wetlands.
When you're trying to implement any kind of urban conservation program, I encourage you to have very clear objectives about what you want that conservation program to achieve. Is it to engage Canadians? Is it to educate them? Is it for actual habitat? Be very clear about what you're trying to achieve with those programs.