This has certainly been a topic of great interest as we've seen communities reopen and welcome visitors. Certainly, the concerns of indigenous communities across our nation have been ones that everyone is trying to be extremely sensitive to, and those concerns extend as well to all communities, I would say. I think that it is not unique to our indigenous communities to want to protect their citizens and to be very concerned about their elders or their elderly. These are concerns that all Canadians share.
I will say that my experience in British Columbia to date has been that there have been very effective dialogues going on between local tourism stakeholders and local first nations communities to ensure that the health and safety needs are the first and foremost considerations. With respect to reopening community borders and welcoming visitors, negotiating time frames and conditions that work for everyone has been, in most cases, extremely amicable. While those have ebbed and flowed a little as health conditions have changed in various parts of our country, I think that, as an industry, we've been very successful in making sure that the health and safety needs of communities are first and foremost.
I will say that along the way, because we have a strong partnership at the federal level with the Indigenous Tourism Association of Canada and at the provincial level with other associations, they too have been extremely helpful in guiding those discussions and ensuring that the needs of everyone have been met.