Yes. Right now, you have the border crossing that is there. You already have it as a lower area, so even when they're building the Gordie Howe bridge, it's taking longer on the Canadian side. Mr. Epp will know this too. We've actually had to fill in the property and let it settle, because it's already at a low level with the river.
That's another complication we face and the reason why, like the Rouge, it got its own legislation. The Rouge has its own legislation. Every other national park has its own legislation. That's part of the reason we want it, because there are other complexities there that are going to involve international border boundary issues.
Then, basically, that sponge area, we want to protect that. The businesses there also want that. They don't want that developed either, because if it's developed, it's going to create more problems. We have major agriculture down there and fuelling and so forth.
There's a whole series of things. It's a gem among a lot of tough stuff that's going on there.