Thank you, Mr. Johns. That's a really great question. It's an important issue.
There is an allocation in the budget in the billions of dollars—I forget the exact amount—for helping Canada meet recovery targets for land and water protection. That should definitely be applied to some critical salmon habitats. I want to provide you with an example from the lower Fraser.
I mentioned the issue of flood control and all of these flood control structures that are blocking salmon habitats. A lot of those are dikes built along sloughs that protect farmland and communities from flooding. One of the ways you can actually increase the habitat is that if you acquire land from farmers and other landholders and move the dikes back a little bit so that you give the river a little bit of room to flood naturally and it's still safe for communities, it opens up the habitat in a way that's really good for salmon. It gives them a safe nursery habitat that they can hang out in during that really vulnerable early life stage. That's—