The FCSAP program, I think, is really the heart of how we work collaboratively. It is a horizontal initiative involving expert science departments providing the sort of guidance and expertise that can be the basis for custodians to know, to plan and to understand risks. We use a common set of nationally used classification approaches that were developed by the CCME. That set of tools allows the custodians to be able to identify the sites that pose the higher risk to human health and the environment.
Per Treasury Board policy, custodians must then focus on those sites first, as a general rule. It is that collaborative effort of basing the program on sound science, of assessing sites first to understand the sorts of contaminants that are there and of then relying on the expertise of custodians, the private sector and departments to develop the right types of remediation and risk management plans and to make sure they make sense. Poor decisions can cost a lot of money, and good decisions can save a lot of money. Working together, I think, is at the heart of it.