Absolutely. Public Safety Canada is responsible for that plan, and every province and territory in our country has a generic emergency management plan and then specific plans for specific hazards.
Remember how I talked about how we follow an all-hazards approach? There are subject matter agencies in each of our provinces and territories that look at the hazards for their specific province, such as a catastrophic earthquake in British Columbia and tornadoes in Alberta but not so much in other areas. Also, each province looks at fires, floods, tornadoes and terrorism across the all-hazards approach and tailors their capabilities to their particular province.
In Alberta, we required all 314 municipalities to also have an emergency plan that's tailored to the hazards in their municipality. The same is true in many provinces in Canada. With that, you then mitigate for that hazard list.