I could add something.
To measure things very specifically for these events, we have to be able to measure things at the community level for a town, for a neighbourhood, for the outskirts of Halifax when they start having forest fire evacuations and for the Sumas Prairie when it's flooding in Vancouver and the Fraser Valley. That system is one we've been working on as a research project in the background. You'll see a number of studies that Statistics Canada has started providing on what the economic impact is.
The thing with these impacts is that because they're so local, we really have to get down to these smaller areas. In order to do that, we need fairly complete data systems, and they take time to compile. Surveys are really good for having really up-to-date information, but because of the sampling frameworks and things, they don't always get down into the real nitty-gritty of the details and we'll have to wait, sometimes up to two years, for much more complete data to show up.
Yes, we're going down that route. We are starting to provide this information, but it comes with this lag.
