Yes, Yukon is definitely leading the way in terms of the recognition of cancers linked to fire service. I think that basically the part of this bill that's so important is that we know there are 19 cancers linked to firefighting and more, based on research and science from other provinces that have the details, and thus have been able to institute that at the provincial level. They have the information, so in bringing partners together at the table to say this is how they based their decision on this is not only about the recognition but also how we can mitigate the risk and what the best practices are for those specific cancers that firefighters can be doing to make sure they mitigate the risk as much as possible.
That's what this is about, bringing together the stakeholders to ask what information they have, sharing it and, at the end of the day, the provinces and territories will decide what they would like to do in their own respective jurisdictions, but it's about bringing together the information. Even when I was preparing for this bill, I was pulling information from various resources, but imagine sharing it with the common cause and the common goal of saving lives.