Absolutely.
We talked a little earlier around Peguis and the advance payments we've used there. Also, if you look at the indigenous community support fund—that was the COVID-specific fund—we had a funding model there whereby the bulk of the funding went to communities as direct allocations so that leadership could make decisions around what they needed to prevent, mitigate and deal with the COVID situation. We had some needs-based funding that we kept back. We did not require full proposals. We worked on a request basis, so there wasn't a lot of burdensome paperwork. However, it was held back for particularly acute situations where additional support was needed.
We're certainly working, as we said earlier, and looking to put first nations partners equally at the table when we're having those discussions with provinces when emergencies are upon us, but also looking at non-structural as well as structural mitigation projects. Those could be radio systems going in. The First Nations' Emergency Services Society in British Columbia, for example, has incredible mapping capability now that it didn't have prior to the last wildfire season. All of those pieces are going into place. We are not done yet. We have lots of opportunities to invest further, but certainly—