I will answer in English, if I may.
The way we have approached this is that the regions know very well the communities that do not have a plan, and they are working with those communities. We think that's where the responsibility should lie, because they do know those communities, and in fact we do recognize that there will always be some communities who either do not wish to have a plan or, because they're so small, in fact may not have the capacity to have a plan. What is important is that the regions know those communities, and then if there is a problem in those communities—if H1N1 is a problem—we would add support to those communities in order to be able to respond.
I think we're asking some very small communities to be prepared, whereas if we compared them with non-first-nation communities of the same size, I would contend that probably the vast majority of first nations communities may well be better prepared because of the work and also because of the time and energy that those communities and community leaders have in fact put in and applied to pandemic preparedness.