I think the minister outlined some of them in his speech.
In part 2 of CEPA, there are already opportunities for the public to bring actions and ask for investigations, so it would be asking the minister for an investigation when someone thinks that an offence has been committed under the act. If the person can say that the minister has not answered reasonably, then they can basically go forward to pursue that contravention of the act.
There are other provisions in that part that would let someone bring a civil action for damages if they have suffered damages as a result of the contravention, or an injunction, as well.
Those are some of the mechanisms that exist to enforce the act and thus the right to a healthy environment.
I want to add that in addition to what we think of as those court-like mechanisms, there are also transparency and other accountability mechanisms. The fact that the implementation framework is public and that its implementation has to be reported on are what really help to encourage compliance and get the shift in thinking and decision-making.