Thanks very much for the time and the wisdom that the witnesses are sharing with us today.
Sergeant Banks, I just want to say thank you for your service and thank you for your frank comments in your opening statement. I think you will find them well heard by the committee, and I appreciate very much your making those observations.
To set some context here, in the last little while in Nova Scotia we had hurricane Dorian in 2019, a category 5 hurricane. Then, in September 2022, there was Fiona, the strongest recorded storm in Canadian history. In February 2023 there was a polar vortex. In June, there were wildfires, and in July, we had three months' worth of rain in 24 hours with flooding and loss of life. Just in the last year, we've had a hurricane, a deep freeze, flooding and wildfires, and in three of those four cases—the hurricane, the flooding and the fires—the CAF has been deployed.
We're in a new state here. We're in a new world order when it comes to responding to climate emergencies, and there are two things I would like to try to cover in this question.
Given the varying types of extreme weather events and disasters happening around the country, the four kinds that I just mentioned.... There are others. There will be air quality disasters. How can government respond? It's like whack-a-mole; they're popping up. There are different kinds. They're geographically separate, and we're trying to respond in an effective way that saves lives. Do any of the panellists have any advice?
Then, I'd like to come back to Sergeant Banks, if I could, at the end of this.