Yes, I quite agree with you, MP Masse.
In the Rouge, for example, I know that they've employed over 100 students to help monitor but also to work on the reintroduction of species that are native to the area. Those summer jobs are more than just tree planting.
That's the other thing. The job opportunities with nature are often seen as reductive down to, “Oh, we're going to plant some trees.” That's certainly part of it. The other aspect is scientific monitoring. They work with the academic institutions, the University of Toronto Scarborough campus, and they work with the Toronto Zoo. It's engaging young people and giving them career paths to perhaps a bigger and brighter future by working with these different institutions in enabling the science, actually making it real, and bringing these areas back to life.
I think in every community that you were engaged with on this there is an opportunity to bring in youth as well as indigenous partners and indigenous jobs in terms of bringing back the native species, learning ceremony, and learning how to invest in these natural areas.