I ask the question because you yourself have said that it's a national urban park, so there are actually some differences from normal parks that have to be taken into consideration. Your mentioning of it in your speech is actually the first time I've heard mining brought up in the context of this park. It is an urban area, where we don't typically have mining or hunting. I can only imagine how fast the Toronto police response would be to guns going off in the park. Poaching typically is not a very difficult problem in that park. There are occasionally some fishermen who might not have a licence who go in and pull some fish out, and on a rare occasion perhaps somebody might go hunting for a deer, but I've never personally heard of those issues. I think it's a bit of a red herring talking about those issues, because they don't so much apply to the park.
It's other issues that are actually of concern with respect to the protections that the park provides. My colleague from Scarborough—Rouge River mentioned the Morningside tributary. There's also the Rouge River Valley. The Rouge River headlands for the waterways are not included in the park and are at this point not seeming to be getting any protections, which actually causes problems further downriver.
What will Parks Canada be doing to try to protect the upper areas of the waterways so as to ensure that silt and other contaminants don't end up in the river, end up downstream, and end up into Lake Ontario?