Thank you for your presentation this morning.
Mr. Hanrahan, I'm glad you have municipal background and experience, because there's one thing that's giving me concern about the bill. There are a lot of advantageous elements, and nobody can disregard the fact that our ports do need modernization, especially given our competition with the United States, which has already been moving on this issue. But one thing is the issue of land use conflict and planning.
This bill will allow for a much more comprehensive usage of your footprint--leases up to 99 years in duration. Normally if you were going to change the land use in a municipality, there would be a process. You would go through the planning advisory committee. There are people there who would vet the process. You would work with the different departments of the city or the town, the municipality. Your adjacent neighbours would be allowed the opportunity to input and there would always be work that happens, outreach and so forth, and then finally it would go to the council for approval. Then there are appeals at the OMB in Ontario if there is disagreement.
Would your association be open to going through local municipal planning principles, similar to other land use changes that other owners have?