I'll keep my comments very short, because I think Mr. Scarth and Dr. Boyce should take that more than I should. I'm just going to speak to the local side. There are mechanisms out there.
There's this program called ALUS. The magic of it is that it engages the local people at the local level. That's the key. Most approaches in the past have been more from the top down, coming from the federal government as a regulation or from a big NGO buying land. Neither approach engaged people. It didn't engage the farmers.
You can. They have amazing local capacity. They can raise their own money locally for some of these things. They have amazing capabilities at the county level. They're smart people, way smarter than we often think. We think about scientists and think that this needs to be driven by Ph.D.s. It doesn't always, no. The local people have an amazing capacity to do this.
As a federal government, the way it has to go is that it has to be decentralized a bit. Now, there are governance issues there, but there's a business model being.... There are models out there that we could look at, but you have to somehow get the money to the local level and have them engage in delivering at the local level. Have them buying in, putting in their own time and energy, and putting their own money in there too.