To answer your question properly, I should first explain how we proceed at the moment.
Since I arrived at the NCC, staff have been assigned to purchase land inside the park. We get in touch with people and we go by market value. So the people have to want to sell and we have to have the money. That is how we work.
Since we began, we have purchased 17 parcels of land, totalling more than 111 hectares. It did not work for two properties, I feel, because the owners were not interested in selling their property at market value. We must also consider the interests of the taxpayer. So we were not able to acquire those two lots.
We drew up a list of priority acquisitions based on the Gatineau Park Master Plan, that is to say, large areas of land and sensitive areas. Take as an example a house built on a one-acre lot that is already damaged. The NCC is not really interested in purchasing a damaged house on the shore of Meech Lake for $700,000. I would rather keep the money for land that can be subdivided and where we could do a lot of construction.
This approach has been very successful. I think that a right of first refusal would not have changed anything up to now, at least since I have been here. However, if you decide to include a right of first refusal, please make sure that you include the details, such as what the right of first refusal means, how we proceed, whether market value is an issue, or if it is simply a way to add value. Details like that are very important if you decide to go that way.