Yes. I'd agree with everything Alan said.
The only other comment I would make is that extensive analysis of this was undertaken when they were designing the Species at Risk Act and understanding the optimum way to manage the land doesn't rely on prohibitions and command and control.
Parliament undertook several studies related to incentives and how to incentivize proper land management. I refer, for example, to the study of Peter Pearse that was tabled in Parliament. In Ecojustice, our expertise is in the law, but when we looked at the application of the law in Canada, one of the things we realized was the shortcoming that few levels within government had invested in understanding the relationship between the law and private landowners or in trying to facilitate the appropriate cooperative relationship. There has to be a component of incentivizing that relationship.