I heard it, but I will answer in English.
I believe you're asking whether it would be a welcome addition to our resources to have an equipped team of reservists to come and support us in more remote regions like the Yukon. I think the short answer is yes. I definitely think there's an enormous need for that type of resource to support a place like the Yukon. This is not to take away from our own internal resourcing, our important work with volunteer agencies to build capacity, and work with the private sector, which is also very important. The reality in the Yukon is that the response pool is so small that I think there are really important times when we would call upon a force like the one you're talking about, a specially trained emergency response type of reserve force that can come and really bring a comprehensive response.
I think the real value for us in the experience we had last year with those 200 armed forces members coming to support the Yukon was, additionally, that the agency was completely self-sufficient from a logistical sense. They housed themselves, they fed themselves, and they required very limited support from our responders and from the system that we had in place to feed and move around our own resources. It was really important that they were able to come in and work within our incident command structure as a wholly complete, trained agency that came with their own engineers and supervisors and complete structure there. That was very important, and that would be a very welcome addition to—