I'm happy to jump in, and I see Mr. Hill is also indicating that he is interested.
I think this absolutely is. It's one of the most complicated areas in British Columbia in terms of competing jurisdictions and complexity of issues, but it also offers a tremendous opportunity to look at how the port, the federal government, the provincial government, indigenous governments, municipalities and all the players, even universities—UBC is right there, and SFU—and others could come together to look at issues that were formerly addressed by what used to be there, which was the Fraser River estuary management program. They could look at bringing that back, ideally in better than a 2.0 form, a 3.0, with co-government. They could look at addressing the critical issues and look at all the restoration that's happening, including the fish passage that is being addressed in the estuary and the Fraser Valley, which I know Watershed Watch and other organizations are working diligently on in their municipalities.
This is absolutely an area where there is an opportunity to leave a legacy, not just for this year or the next political cycle but for the next hundred years, which is really what the port operates under. That's the context we should be looking at to address the Fraser estuary impacts, because those impacts also affect the food the southern resident killer whales rely on.
Mr. Hardie, you've touched on a really important point where I think there could be co-operation and real movement made.