We are engaging first nations—and I want to say this in the right way—to understand their traditional knowledge about changes they've observed on the landscape, in a number of different ways. It's not only Environment Canada, but it's also Alberta and organizations like the Wood Buffalo Environmental Association that are engaging with first nations to understand how it is that they see changes on the landscape or in the waterways.
We're trying to translate the concerns that they observe into scientific monitoring objectives so that we can go back to them and say, “You told us you saw these changes that you were concerned about. As a result, we initiated this particular monitoring and here's the result of that monitoring.”
You asked about Fort Chipewyan. One of the ways we feed back is through a process called the Peace-Athabasca Delta Environmental Monitoring Program, or PADEMP. They have an annual meeting where they bring the first nations from that region together, to Fort Chipewyan. We have extensively participated in that process to present our results from various types of monitoring and to hear their further concerns about what they're seeing in their local environment.
It's very much a dialogue.