There is one thing I can think of. I'm just going to pick this one example. In the area where I live on Vancouver Island—I've been there for more than 50 years—there are five of the six un-logged, un-mined, natural, wild in a sense, rivers. In this area there is a huge concentration of fish farms. Our salmon in that area are on the verge of extinction. They are in the same situation as the salmon in the Fraser. It has been proven scientifically, peer-reviewed by the best fisheries scientists around the world, that the cause of this demise is, for the very most part, the proliferation of sea lice by the fish farms. There is no way the fish farms can exist in that area and produce these billions and billions of sea lice that prey upon the young salmon as they come out of the rivers. Those fish farms must be removed from the ocean if there are going to be fish to feed the people, the bears, the wolves, the eagles, and all the wild creatures we exist with. When we speak about poverty, this is a looming reality.
Studying it in a commission for the next two years—I don't know how long it is going to take to write another report—is just buying another cycle of fish leaving and returning. This has to be done immediately.
That is one example of the things I'm dealing with that could be done in a short time, and the moment it is done it will remedy the situation.