I think the supplemental is easy to answer first, and the answer is yes. I spent my career in the forest industry. The forest industry traditionally, because we haven't gotten around to diversifying properly, has been a series of good times and bad times. Through some of the “bad times” in the eighties and nineties, the federal government partnered with the Province of British Columbia and invested, if I recall correctly, “b” as in billions to deal with the then not sufficiently restocked lands. They did a great job of doing two things: catching up at that point on what was insufficiently restocked, but it also happened at a point in the downturn when a lot of the workers had lost employment, a lot of curtailments happened at that point, and that kept a lot of people working in their communities doing exactly that.
So, absolutely yes, although it is largely provincial jurisdiction, the federal government has a fantastic role to play. They've shown they can do that.
To Mr. Gorman's point, we all know in British Columbia, particularly in the interior around Quesnel, Williams Lake, up to Prince George, because of the pine beetle he referred to, there's going to be an enormous need for—my green friends don't like me saying this—mowing down what hasn't fallen down yet. Although millions of hectares of dead and dying trees are standing or lying down, that's still prime growing country for our future forests. So absolutely, there's a huge role for the federal government.