That was indeed a disastrous situation that the member referred to with the spill and the sinking. That's one of the key focuses of our oceans protection plan: to put in place the capacity for indigenous communities to be guardians of the waters, their traditional waters, and to have the craft, the equipment and the training to be able to identify problems and respond very quickly.
I will say that with the Zim Kingston incident, the first call that went out from the incident commander was to the local indigenous communities, and they were partners in the spill response throughout. We're going to be building on that capacity to respond. It has already been hugely increased by the $1.5-billion oceans protection plan.
Perhaps the commissioner has a more granular response to the way the Kitsilano Coast Guard base, which we reinstated and expanded, is being used for indigenous training.