I did some more reading here, and some of these activities that are regulated under Kawartha Conservation were developed through the City of Kawartha Lakes. They had a public meeting, etc., and I understand there was a process.
I think, again, when we aren't defining this and taking the time to do so, we are in fact potentially giving some extraordinary power to the minister and officials within that department to create policy and guidelines, and the enforcement of law given to them in part in this piece of legislation might not give impacted individuals, who may not pay attention or have an interest in that area until a certain time, the ability to raise concerns or have input.
In fact, outside this passing, Parliament will not have the ability to vote on these measures in an individual manner as more and more regulations are imposed. We will then have regulations being added that have the power of law and the penalties to go with them, but we're not defining what we're talking about.
This is, to me, very open-ended, while at the same time, regardless of what happens with this legislation, the government can still, through the department, continue to fund water systems, fund training and fund the distribution of parts, and continue to upgrade systems as technology evolves. This is putting into the hands of the minister an extraordinary amount of power that we have not actually defined.
Again, I just keep going back.... We're potentially going to pass a piece of legislation through which, if we don't do the work here and start defining some of this stuff, a minister and the department could start to add restrictions on pieces of land and on water, such that the minister might wake up one day and think, “Well, I want to impose this regulation through the department.” He or she might have a bad day and throw that in, and because we haven't defined it, they can pretty much do whatever they want.
I still think we should be doing the work here, honestly.