Absolutely. That is a large part of the thinking behind the creation of the Rouge National Urban Park on the very outskirts of the Greater Toronto Area. It's also a big part of Parks Canada's very successful program, learn to camp, where across the country for the last couple of years, young people and their families, many new Canadians—who associate tents most often with refugee circumstances—are encouraged to leave the urban centres, where very often they first arrive in Canada, and to experience the great Canadian outdoors.
We're hoping that the Rouge Park—and even now it's available for camping—when it is completed as Canada's first urban national park will be accessible to fully 20% of the Canadian population, young people. It's the only national park where public transit will allow students to come to interpretation centres, to interact with nature, and we hope it will be used as a springboard to visit some of our more remote parks, traditional parks like Banff and Jasper but also the Nahanni, the Nááts'ihch'oh, Gros Morne, and Torngat. We have legislation, as you know before the Senate now, to create a national park on Sable Island off Nova Scotia.