That's a good question.
COVID was very interesting, but, as you said, it was kind of unique. Let's hope it's fading. There were a lot of supports for medical personnel, vaccination, etc., in that one. In terms of climate change, obviously that's fires and floods, and that's about evacuation and airlift. The CAF has finite resources when it comes to airlift. Given international events over the last couple of years, that's also more constrained.
For instance, we helped evacuate an entire first nation, the Mathias Colomb, in Manitoba from a fire risk this summer. That was 2,000-odd folks. Between the first nation's emergency management folks, the provinces and us, there was a major evacuation there. Those are the kinds of things we're seeing.
Last year in northern Ontario and B.C., the fires were extensive. There were massive efforts in Ontario to airlift first nations out of isolated communities that do not have road access into places in northern Ontario and the GTA as well. Again, that's airlift, coordination, real-life supports and medical and health—