When you work for the federal government it always feel like a 10 when moving with the provinces.
We've had very good relations. It's becoming almost routine, if I may say, so we had the pandemic and then we had Ebola, and then we've had disease after disease, which is really quite interesting.
We have standing committees. There's the public health network, which I co-chair with Nova Scotia, which is a formal committee. We have the chief medical officers as well. We do that on a regular basis and an ongoing basis, so it has been routine business.
With the front-line practitioners it has been the same. We connected with them for the same issues as well. For the Syrian refugees, we connected with them as well, and that would be the nurses and the doctors and some of the other front-line practitioners. We're doing that on a routine basis. It is really becoming business as normal with this.