Everybody understands it's 600 metres. There's no agriculture inside that corridor. It was developed to support interior dwelling species, birds. That's where that came from. It's a 600 metre corridor; it's going to use up to 2,000 acres of land.
In the draft management plan, and we've already been working with the Parks Canada people and talking about how agriculture will work, I'm against the corridor. I don't believe that we need to have that. There are other ways to reach the ecosystem's health.
Your question, Mr. Calandra, is how many farmers would want to stay. If the corridor is gone and if we have people like Jim Robb and other people dictating how we will farm, it will be death by a thousand cuts. I say that because Jim has already said publicly that the next thing he will go after is pesticides and fertilizers in the park.