Very quickly, Infrastructure Canada is leading on that project—the disaster mitigation and adaptation fund—but overall, I would say the government is trying. Of course, we need to be in a position where we can support response and recovery, but also, we need to shift. We need to be focusing on adaptation and mitigation. If you look at floods, for instance, we have a program in place that is really providing funding so you can put mitigation projects in place—not necessarily for structural projects—that will help to actually limit the costs of recovery.
The other thing I would point out is in the context of our emergency management strategy. I was alluding to this earlier. Federal and provincial ministers sat down together to say we need to have a public-facing emergency management strategy. Then once this is done—we're expecting in January, because we've been working really hard—you need to put some programs in place. In my view—on your questions about FireSmart—this is something that all levels of government, including indigenous communities, need to focus on collectively: how we're moving forward to actually support FireSmart and make sure that we are putting this in place beyond the pilot projects. If you go on the website of FireSmart, you can see that there are some communities that are actually FireSmart-approved across Canada, but you can do a lot more.