Sure. The emergency management strategy does exist. That's a Public Safety-led strategy, and it works with the FPTs and ministers of the FPTs in terms of principles and the commitments we've made in Canada to advance the cause of preparedness and response—and mitigation, frankly. That means upfront investments in things such as infrastructure, etc., as many people have commented, no doubt.
What Mr. Fadden is talking about is what we would call.... It's a little farther down in detail in terms of a core Canadian capabilities list. A “capability” can be anything from procurement to coordination, like what I do. It could be the CAF. It can be planning. There are literally hundreds of capabilities that can be brought to bear. Firefighting, obviously, is a strength in Canada. On any given event, I think there are different levels of strategies there, if that helps clarify. There is an action plan under that emergency management strategy in Canada, which the provinces have committed to. I believe there are five or six priorities.
I don't know that there's a major governance review as part of that. I'm not sure what that might be alluding to, but certainly, internal to government, there is, federally, an EM—emergency management—transformation agenda, which Minister Blair is obviously supporting and leading. That's at the federal level. It has implications and engagement, obviously, with the provinces as well, due to the shared responsibilities that we continue to allude to.
There are a number of levels of strategies and work to do, I think, some of which are well ahead, and some of which are still mainly a concept. I hope that helps.