I wouldn't mind that information being submitted to us because it's something we need to follow.
One thing we did hear from the people who live there—and this was when we were actually out inspecting small craft harbours—is that they could have, based on their local knowledge, mitigated the damage caused by the Nathan E. Stewart, but they were forbidden from doing so by both the Coast Guard and through workers' compensation in British Columbia.
This all goes back to something we've heard—and our colleagues on the Conservative side referenced it as well—and that is the use of local knowledge and basically trusting them to know what they're talking about when they come up with a suggestion, etc.
I am wondering if, for instance, at the reopening of the Kitsilano Coast Guard base and the training that's going on there, we are in fact doing a better job of understanding the local knowledge as well as giving our indigenous people the tools and the training to do this work. Are we trusting them a little more when they come to us and say that they know how to fix this thing, and do we stop getting in their way when they want to do it?