Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My questions are probably going to deal mostly with the environmental process modernization plans. So I'll just prepare Madam Kirby for that.
As I went through some of the documents that were prepared for today's briefing, I had some specific questions around that, but I'd just like to set a scenario for you. Let's just say that there's a little creek flowing through a small Alberta town, and in this creek there's a healthy population of stickleback, none of them ninespine, so we don't have to worry about the species at risk. There are a few willows around a road crossing where there's a culvert that was put in, say, 20 or 30 years ago. They need to expand the size of the road, and they need to come up with a suitable crossing.
As I'm going through this, I'm wondering. Obviously we have fish in the creek. It's a small creek. None of them are sport fish or fish that would be considered commercially viable or have any commercial value other than the effect that we've got one more tick on the biodiversity list of species that we have in our province.
The small community has about 2,000 people. They pay their property taxes to hire municipal administrators. Those municipal administrators are there to make sure things operate in accordance with the rules that surround them. One of those rules is that when you go to put a bridge or a culvert in across a body of water that has some fish in it, you have to make sure you protect the fishery's habitat. I think everybody understands that. That's obviously the role of DFO, and that's obviously something we need to look at and that needs to be taken into consideration.
But as I was looking at this practitioners guide, it came to dawn on me suddenly that there are some questions in here. What I'm looking for is just basically a streamlining of the process, and I know that's what the whole plan is. You streamline the processes so that when we have something like this going on, when a review has to take place, some common sense can prevail.
Common sense, to me, would tell me to just go in there and make as little impact as possible. If we have to, we can put a bit larger culvert in, or if we have to put a bridge in there right now, we can, as long as we don't disturb too much vegetation, as long as we don't damage the flow of water or restrict the flow of water or anything like that. Common sense would tell me that the sticklebacks are going to survive no matter what we do and that we should be able to move on with this.
But when I go through some of the documents that you have here on aquatic effects assessment and so on, chances are we're going to get into aquatic effects assessment. Would you agree with that, given the scenario that I painted for you? Or are we just basically going to have an operational statement and that would be it?