By all means. Thank you.
A community generally at a watershed scale may face some issues. Perhaps they have a water quality issue that's been identified as part of a larger sub-basin bit of research. They realize they have to do something. They don't know exactly what to do. Based on our experience and the fact that we're known in rural Alberta, we get a call asking for our help with this issue.
We step in. I will use one watershed group as an example. The Beaver Creek Watershed Group at the south end of the Porcupine Hills, part of the Oldman watershed, asked us to help them resolve what it was that was causing an issue with water quality. So we helped them form. Ironically one of the first steps we had to take was help them re-form their community. Rural communities don't exist in the cohesive way they used to, and so we had to help that community re-form so that they had a body of people suitable to start resolving the issue.