I think we will wind up putting the cart before the bulls, because you have to ask yourselves if we want the Canadian military to do more work on domestic operations or if we want to alleviate the pressures on them. Once that decision is taken, and we've built the resiliency across Canada, then we can have that conversation.
Having said that, I think there are a lot of capabilities existing in the Canadian Armed Forces that are able to react to emergencies. That's why we call on them. Whether it's logistics, it's a willing mobilized, highly effective workforce that's able to do first aid work and so forth, or having the equipment that's able to carry out medical emergencies, these are all things that the military is actually quite good at.
There might be other places where you wonder why we ask the military to cut down trees that have fallen three or four days after a storm, when in fact there are local companies that are better at it and who could use the resources to rebuild the local economy. We're actually taking jobs away from local resiliency by having the armed forces do non-emergency work after the emergency has passed. That's a good question we need to ask ourselves.