I think that having a panel like the one Dr. Boyce was talking about is important. Get great people to help direct that plan. That's important. Getting the input of locals, hunters, and farmers is really important. You need great research people like Dr. Boyce, but you need great local people as well. Also, at the end of the day, it needs investment. It needs a plan and it needs investment. It has to have both.
I want to re-emphasize the investment side. Again, when there are flood disasters, you guys are paying. You're going to pay that bill, so invest your money proactively. Let's get into flood prevention. Let's get into doing it through the local communities, and let's be smart. I think that's the way.
Let's invest in engaging Canadians in the outdoors. That's the other thing I would say. That doesn't mean just hunting. It means getting them outdoors, and there are a lot of ways to do that. For little groups like ours, with a lot of volunteers, we just need a little bit of gas in the tank. Habitat is expensive. Flood remediation is expensive.
It's about supporting guys like us and gals like those back in the office where I work to connect new Canadians and youth to the outdoors and to the environment and making them environmentalists. That's cheap. That's really cheap, and you get leverage from that. We always invest in habitat. We don't invest much in engaging Canadians in it. The latter is at least as important as the former, and I would say more so.