Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Purdy, it's great to see your family here. It's the first time I've seen committee witnesses bring family, and I think it's very important for us, and for Canadians, to see who these issues impact. So thank you for that, and welcome.
Mr. Meisenheimer, I was going to follow up on the shift in habitat. If a shift were made where we take biologists, scientific resources, and enforcement resources, as you mentioned, more talking to the U.S. issue—and I'll talk about Canadian perspectives and enforcement in a minute. If we're moving scientific and biology energies and efforts and human and financial resources in the direction of major projects, instead of having them spread so thin across every single project regardless, do you think that would be a more efficient use of the human and financial resources that we have at our disposal?