Certainly, I can.
There are two basic pieces. They are very obvious, but these are important for people. There is the procurement itself, and then once the goods arrive there is the logistics solution to distribute them. The system we have in place is that the Public Health Agency is managing the distribution. They get the goods into their warehouse. Amazon is assisting them, with Canada Post and Purolator, to distribute to where it's needed.
There are a couple of scenarios. One is where we have done bulk ordering collaboratively with the provinces and territories. That stuff would move fairly quickly to the province or territory that ordered it. There's another scenario in place where a province or territory realizes it's running out of something urgently, a bit of an unforecasted demand. There is a process—and again this is drifting into our friends at the Public Health Agency of Canada's territory—where they have tables that get communications about urgent need, and they would take care of urgent deliveries in the most efficient way possible to meet that need.
The distribution is critical and that's why there was a recognition that bringing in some outside expertise—Amazon, Canada Post, Purolator—to help with that was absolutely essential. Equally important though is the collaboration that the health tables—federal, provincial, territorial—would have in ordering who needs what.