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Environment committee  That's an excellent question. Wildlife Habitat Canada has actually been funding the Brant goose festival for a number of years, and we've watched the number of participants increase. Our funding from Environment Canada is restricted under the contribution agreement we get. Of the

April 16th, 2013Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  Bill answered most of the question, but having worked internationally, and quite literally, on beaches, for migratory shore birds and sea turtle nesting sites, they can be rehabilitated. It depends on the nature of the interaction and what's going on around them. Your question w

April 16th, 2013Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  There's what's known as the Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network. It's literally a group of people, working from Arctic Canada right down to the southern tip of Argentina, who are developing sites for these migratory shorebirds.

April 16th, 2013Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  I'll answer the second part of your question, if I may, in terms of provincial-federal work. Many of the provinces have developed their own species recovery plans and biodiversity plans. Then you can go down to the regional conservation organizations and the national ones, which

April 16th, 2013Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  There are. I could go into great detail for you. Many of the grant applications that we receive have federal and provincial governments, non-government conservation organizations, and local groups all partnered on a specific project. So it is going on; it's not well publicized. E

April 16th, 2013Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  I think there are a number of really good programs that are in effect now. For example, in Manitoba through the Manitoba Habitat Heritage Corporation they sign easement agreements with the agricultural community. They do it in such a way that whether they're raising crops or anim

April 16th, 2013Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  Thank you, Mr. Chairman and committee members, for giving Wildlife Habitat Canada the opportunity to present some ideas for your study on habitat conservation. The details of who we are and what we do are in the speaking notes, so I'll just summarize. We were created in 1984 by

April 16th, 2013Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  If you are going to use a grants program as a financial incentive, think about what that program can leverage, and perhaps think about the people who will be participating in it and how much money they have to bring to the table. An art grants program would work on a one-to-one m

April 26th, 2012Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  There's quite a bit it could do. There are a lot of wetlands in Canada that are unprotected, but there are organizations that can be connected through the implementation part of a national conservation plan to work on those wetlands. There are organizations such as Ducks Unlimit

April 26th, 2012Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  Thank you very much. It's a good question. There is a lot of green space in urban areas that is really underutilized. I've been talking to some school teachers and principals here in Ottawa because when you go by a school you see a lot of grass. There isn't a heck of a lot el

April 26th, 2012Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  I don't have any figures with me but I can obtain some for you. There have been a number of studies done across North America, for example, on the impact of water pollution on human health. There have been a couple of incidents in Ontario, Walkerton being one that comes to mind.

April 26th, 2012Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  The hunting and angling community has been the major funder of wildlife conservation in North America since the beginning. Many of the conservation organizations you see today were founded by anglers and hunters, and they continue to participate. They provide money through their

April 26th, 2012Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  Yes. I may be wrong, but I'm saying that we're all part of nature, that it's inside us. We've lost the way of looking at that and connecting with it. I've taken kids who have never hunted before—my own two daughters, for example, years ago—out onto the prairies of Alberta and in

April 26th, 2012Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  It's interesting that you mention the pine beetle—and there's only so much that we can put into one of these presentations—because the pine beetle is moving farther north and ravaging the forests up the west coast. It has the potential to go across the boreal forest in Canada.

April 26th, 2012Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko

Environment committee  You're right. The industry sector is participating more and more in conservation. There are programs across North America started initially by the Wildlife Habitat Council in the United States, but they do work here in Canada. One of the biggest groups they're working with is Ont

April 26th, 2012Committee meeting

Len Ugarenko