That isn't actually under the purview of consular services. It falls under humanitarian assistance and disaster response, but we are part of an integrated task force format, so we work together to share information. What we've found is that the kind of information you need for a consular response is very similar to the kind of information that informs a very good humanitarian response on the ground, so we all work together. We're embedded with each other in the response centre. It's very effective in terms of communications.
Before any deployment of an asset, like the DART or any other humanitarian assistance response, we send a Canadian disaster assessment team, which is an integrated mission—with DND, Global Affairs, and our humanitarian liaison partners—to assess the conditions on the ground and decide what the most effective response is for that country. In some cases, it might be the assets that are provided through the DART. In other cases, it's different forms of humanitarian assistance. We make those assessments when we see the situation on the ground and determine what needs have been identified and how they can most effectively be addressed.