I appreciate the opportunity to answer that question. When I was in Manitoba recently, I went through the list of communities with the regional office and asked them where they got the information about the existence and status of those plans. Sometimes it was one of the health care workers; sometimes it was the pandemic influenza coordinator. It was always somebody from the community who we got the information from about the status of those plans.
I'm not going to hypothesize about why the assessment from some individuals is different, because I think all we can do is rely on what we are actually getting. As you said, the letter we wrote went from the region to the chiefs of the communities, telling them where we got the information from so that they could come back if they were actually concerned about that.
As I said before, I think there's a sense that, because of the increased challenges in those communities, therefore it is actually more difficult for a community to be prepared, and I accept that, because then the challenges in the community in terms of spreading infection are greater. Those concerns are there, which is why we're concentrating on those communities, concentrating on getting responses to those communities, and in fact then working with the communities where there is most concern about the capacity to implement those plans that actually go out there.