If you go back to the Filmon report and then the Canadian wildland fire strategy of 2005, which embodied those recommendations in it—it was a Canadian Council of Forest Ministers strategy and just renewed in 2016, so re-endorsed—everybody agrees that “firesmarting” communities is one of the best investments we can make. Frankly, everybody has under-invested in that in the past 10 years. To be fair, immediately following that was the global recession and the financial collapse. Folks didn't have as much money as they did when that strategy was made.
We're doing a lot of work on fire modelling and fire prediction at the Canadian Forest Service. It's one of our very important research areas, providing data and tools for decision-makers on the ground, and increasingly collaboration with the defence industry to access some of their technology in the sky for improving our ability to watch fires as they burn. Increasing the security around communities is absolutely one thing that need to be done. I can say that there are discussions going on and that they're probably the provincial governments' top priorities. I would hope to see some opportunity there.