Thanks for recognizing the people of Calgary and the work that they're going through on a boil water advisory and a water shortage due to some infrastructure issues that they have going on. I can assure you that the city itself, as well as others, is working hard to repair that and making sure communication is out there to keep...and protect the safety of Albertans. I should note it's actually quite rare to have any boil water advisory in Alberta, so I think it also takes a bit of attention there, but it does show the continuous need to maintain and enhance our infrastructure. That is one of those areas we look at, and you rightly point to, to ask whether there are some areas where we need to look at the agency or the Canada Water Act—probably more so the agency than the act.
Obviously, there's federal-provincial coordination on information and knowledge sharing in science, which is what you've heard from others, but prioritizing and, frankly, sustained and increased funding for critical infrastructure is a really important piece for provinces like Alberta, whether it's for drinking water systems and regional systems like that, or storage and reservoirs. We heard about changing climate and adaptation and that the need to look at and modernize our infrastructure is really important, and that's founded in everything, from investing not only in research and knowledge networks for freshwater science but also, dare I say, in clean technology for efficiency, conservation and other purposes. However, it is really sustained and long-term investment.