I'll be turning this one over to Greg Loos in a second, with his chapeau, around Operation Nanook. Conceived about 10 years ago, or described 10 years ago, was this requirement to not be episodic, but persistent in a return to exercising our competency, capability, and capacity in the north—not for our benefit, but for our collective benefit. The collective in this context are, in the first instance, municipal authorities, first responders, territorial partners, federal agencies, and the Canadian Armed Forces in our north.
Operation Nanook has moved across different population centres through our north over about eight years and has gone to different places to leave not just an experience in the people who have flown north and come south again, but leave an enduring effect within our north. That is driven by the idea of the Government of Canada's strategy, which is to enhance governance in the north, provide for the safety and security of our citizens in the north and to advance social and economic well-being in the north. Those are the motivators that inform how we operate in the north, and Operation Nanook has been helping, as part of our program of activities in north, to do that.
I'll ask General Loos to speak to the summer of 2014.