Those are the critical services I was talking about in theory, and it has happened. When there was the power outage, departments relocated from one side of the river to the other. They kicked in their business continuity plan. If something happened today in downtown Ottawa and we needed to be functional tomorrow, the business continuity plan would allow us to do that.
People have alternate sites. They have a list of key people who must come in. They are identifying the key services they must deliver, and all the rest: “Well, sorry, it is not important today, because the critical services are those that have an impact on the safety, security, and economic well-being of Canadians and Canadian society, and that's what we're going to focus on.” So we are assessing those plans now. We're satisfied that 90% of them have what it takes.
I want to go back to your previous question.
As they develop those plans and assess those critical services, we're asking them if they have engaged their occupational health and safety committee in their departments. That's one question we're looking at, because that involves the union and the employees.