The boating community is really important. Every area you go to, you have a slightly different community.
For the Ottawa River, there's an Ottawa Riverkeeper program. That's one of the world's greatest rafting rivers. There's a strong boating community there that has very particular interests and very particular concerns. You could compare that to a city like Kingston, where they're not navigating the river so much--it's more about the harbour--but it's a big sailing city. There are Council of Commodores everywhere across the country. It's a community that really does understand what the waterways are like because they're out there every day.
You might think to yourself, well, I'm building a dock, and it's just two feet longer than the dock I used to have. I have to build it because my old dock is rotting. You're up at the cottage and it seems like a small minor project, no big deal. But it can in fact have a huge impact on the current uses for that waterway.
We see that on the Hudson River, which was mentioned. I had the privilege of spending a week there last year, camping and getting to see the river. There are very strict rules about where docks can go and how long they can be. They have had problems on that waterway over the years with small projects that people didn't think were a big deal when they were actually interfering with a fairly substantial right.