That's a great question. It has happened both ways. Sometimes, in the absence of a more formalized framework or emergency response structure that would allocate funding or resources to support an emergency response to anthropogenic debris related to container spills, etc., we do step in and become proactive. In other instances, there's debris that continues to wash in from a variety of international and domestic sources. It continues to wash in from the Zim Kingston spill.
In those instances, we'll work with either the provincial or the federal government to propose a collaborative approach for ongoing spill response and recovery, as well as for recycling and disposal initiatives that are pertinent to those recovery efforts and that have allocated funding mechanisms, either through direct contract awards through the procurement system, or through funds like the ghost gear fund, the “clean coast, clean waters” fund, which was recently done through a provincial initiative, or a variety of other initiatives that are put out by Transport Canada, the Coast Guard or the Department of Fisheries and Oceans.