The development pressures are most intense in Banff and Jasper, and they always have been. Again, in the 1990s there were limits put in place, including in the act, which now makes it clear that ecological integrity will be the first priority for management. There were caps on development put in place specific to the mountain parks.
CPAWS absolutely embraces the idea that people need to enjoy and appreciate our parks. This is absolutely critical for people to have the opportunity to experience nature and to become conservationists. It's how I became a conservationist. That's not the challenge. The challenge is when that use supersedes the ability to protect and the mandate to actually pass along these areas unimpaired. That's what the act and the limits to development in Banff were designed to do, to make sure that the park isn't impaired for future generations.
We're actually just saying that we need to adhere to those limits, put in place a decade or more ago, to make sure that this happens. There are now infrastructure developments that are encroaching on those limits, and that's what we're calling on—