Mr. Chair, our involvement with coastal nations actually starts well before any incidents. As part of our response planning, we engage the various communities by identifying what's important to them, some of the environmental sensitivities in their particular area and also how they want to be notified and who we notify. At the time, we have those lists. They're attached to each of our plans and then we go out with a notification. Once the case is stood up and we're having a command post, then we look for further involvement.
With me in the incident command post, we had two unified commanders, incident commanders from Beecher Bay First Nation and the emergency manager from the Sc'ianew aggregate of nations. Also, on the west coast, as in anywhere else in that area, we solicit involvement in the environmental unit. This is the traditional knowledge and how we bring that into decisions before the unified commanders.