For the boating industry, the Canadian Navigable Waters Act directly affects private enterprise. We're a private marina here. It's not like it's the middle of the lake. We try to do our best to control what goes on in here, and sometimes we have people here who do not want to act with respect. There are sometimes 2,000 or 3,000 people in here on a Saturday or Sunday afternoon. They come in with a high rate of speed and create a large wake that can damage property, but also they'll stop and fish in the middle of the channel or play their music right around dinner time when people are trying to enjoy dinner with their family.
Unfortunately, at this time, in the way the Canadian Navigable Waters Act is read and the way that some of the other agencies, such as the Ministry of Natural Resources, are interpreting it, these people are allowed to stop and anchor right in our waterway. We don't have an entrance and an exit; we have one entrance, and the exit is the same here at MacDonald Turkey Point Marina, so it makes it very difficult to have any kind of control in our waterway.
It's no different here in Long Point Bay from any of the marshes and hunting clubs along the north shore of Lake Erie. They're all posted as no trespassing, but now everybody can go in there and fish, whereas previously they were capable of keeping folks out.