As I mentioned in my remarks, I would take an entirely different approach. Just as we need an ecosystem approach to development and approvals in the country, we need an ecosystem approach to how we organize government on this question. If we're going to have a national conservation plan, then we need to rejig the institutional framework we have within government. So I would see major reforms in the way Environment Canada is organized, and I would see some kind of new institutional arrangement that would enable work across departments to occur effectively. That would be something perhaps attached to the centre of government.
I would take a fresh look at this and say that if our goal is really—if this is what the committee decided—to protect the integrity and resilience of ecosystems across this country and restore those that have been damaged, then we need to have the institutional capacity to do that. We haven't got it organized in that way within the federal government or provincial governments right now.