Yes. This is definitely part of our process and something that we take seriously, because it is the best way, actually, of making sure Canadians aren't in harm's way. Our travel advisory program is monitored and updated on a 24-7 basis, and they're in direct contact with those agencies that are tracking storms and looking at the path.
As we update those advisories, they're pushed out and we are in communication with airlines and commercial carriers who use those as triggers for their emergency action plans, designed to pull Canadians out of harm's way. For example, for hurricane Maria, we saw over 6,000 Canadians depart via their commercial carriers from the Dominican Republic in the two days immediately prior to the arrival of that storm. That prevented Canadians from being in the wrong place at the wrong time.