I'm afraid I haven't had much conversation with people across the country, which would help me answer that. I could say that my advisory team included people from Nova Scotia, Maine, Ontario and British Columbia—all of whom knew more about forestry than I did. I'll make that very clear from the beginning.
In response to your question, and relying very heavily on that expertise, the mechanisms might be different and in fact would have to be different, based on things like forest type, tenure regimes and economic conditions. The basic objective is that we need more forestry that's designed to, at a minimum, maintain, if not enhance, the resiliency and the health of ecosystems and biodiversity. In my opinion, it needs to become an imperative right across the country if we want healthy ecosystems, biodiversity, forests and forest products, not just 20 or 30 years from now, but hundreds of years from now.
I firmly believe that this is increasingly the case as our forests come under more and more stress, including from climate change, but all kinds of other stresses as well.
The last thing I'll say is that, at least in Nova Scotia, we have a history, since the introduction of pulp mills, of having a one-size-fits-all forest management strategy. Nature, everywhere, is more complex than a one-size-fits-all forest management strategy. Whether it's a triad model, as I recommended in Nova Scotia, or some other model, I think we need to fit our management approaches more to what the forests are capable of giving us and capable of absorbing.
I'll just end by saying that the Mi'kmaq foresters I met with said that it all comes down to listening to the forests. The forests will tell you what they can give if you take care of them. That was a very important underlying theme of the work that I did.