Again, this points to the flaws in SARA. Back when I was in the forest industry, I was part of the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association's team that was evaluating initial drafts of the act. We begged the Liberal government of the day not to do what they did with this particular act. We predicted that all of these things were going to happen.
But this is a real life example, not some kind of academic exercise regarding a subspecies of a bird. These are real people, real lives, real communities. That's one of the reasons that full implementation of SARA, as you are recommending, is very problematic and difficult for us. Can you appreciate what fully implementing SARA actually would mean?