Thank you, Chair.
Thank you, witnesses, for being here today. I appreciate it. This is a very important topic, and some of my questions were stolen by other members across the way. They beat me to the punch, and that's fantastic.
I did want to talk about or ask some questions related to the comment about proactively incentivizing resiliency. We know that there are always unintended consequences from other actors and different levels of government doing things like civil works that impact each other. How do we develop a bit more of a coordinated organizational structure and strategy to make sure that, with other actors, we're not cutting off our nose to spite our face?
This may be a specific instance. I know that where there's been some overland flooding, we have flood maps. This goes to the next question, about flood mapping and the status of that. A road gets built that hasn't been included in that map and then exacerbates a flooding event because that water can't drain the way it used to drain. How does that impact the homeowner?
