What we have right now is a good start. It's the promise of investments in building new urban protection and near-urban protection, a tree-planting program, investments in nature-based solutions, and an ability to hopefully see more natural infrastructure investments.
I would suggest that the piece that is missing is how to be more intentional about these. You could take any number of municipalities, but if you look at Windsor, you have the possibility to do new urban protection. Even offshore you have the ability to do a national marine conservation area. You can invest in natural infrastructure at the same time as you're doing the fuller landscape. You can look at creating jobs and economic opportunity by restoring habitat and working with farmers on hydrology changes that would benefit the farming community, but also benefit increasing our resilience to climate change.
That works very well across the Golden Horseshoe as well where you see everything from the Rouge to Cootes to Escarpment EcoPark, the Toronto ravines, natural infrastructure and the Greenbelt. All of that could be more intentional and working in harmony and then linking in and making a bigger objective rather than each of those individual programs in isolation.