Yes, sir, absolutely.
We do that now and, in fact, if a reservist is available for the AOC, that reservist is welcome to be loaded on the course. And we do that on a number of other fronts. We also cater to it in that way I mentioned, doing regular and reserve training to the same standard, but not necessarily on every task. So we try to align the system in a modular format to allow reservists to be able to take that. That provides a cornerstone, and if a reservist comes out into operations, they will go through a deliberate road to high readiness. We will address the delta that they may have had in their training and top them up so they're ready to go.
With the way that the army has reinvigorated the collective training regime, we now have reserve units that train alongside regular units inside a context or scenario to their benefit. But we'll also apply collective training standards more formally to reserve units.
As an example, in my past job we deployed the reserve territorial battle group, the 36th brigade out of Halifax, to Prince Edward Island to conduct an exercise in the Summerside area. We had air support from the Royal Canadian Air Force. We had two maritime coastal defence vessels, and one was used to transport troops. So we had the army, navy, and air force working together in the reserve. That's an awesome statement. The scenario, although it was a weekend training event, was set up so that they went right into the scenario. So, from a company level, the young soldiers got to do some pretty neat stuff. And at the same time at a higher level, I had a domestic response situation where I was exercising the command and control of that reserve brigade and the territorial battle group to verify that they could respond and organize in a time of crisis, just as they had done in Newfoundland, which was another brigade at the time.