I can start on that.
I think I referred to it earlier, Mr. Chairman. There is a two-step assessment process. It's triggered—that was the word I was looking for before—either by the federal government or by the provincial government, but most normally by another jurisdiction.
The first step in the assessment process is a preliminary assessment, and there are specific criteria that are looked at. One is that the disaster event isn't a recurring event. One is that the disaster event is an abnormal event and therefore is something that producers could not have foreseen and prepared for. The third is that the disaster would result in extraordinary costs to producers, which are costs that they would not normally incur resulting from actions they must take in order to mitigate the impacts and/or resume production as quickly as possible. In terms of that preliminary assessment, those three criteria must be met to trigger a formal assessment.
In terms of the criteria that are looked at from a formal assessment point of view, it's that the incident would be a collective experience affecting a large enough number of producers in a region such that it has an impact on the sector in that region; that it results in significant negative impacts on affected producers and their capacity to produce or market agricultural products; and that it results in significant extraordinary costs. Again, those are defined as costs that would have a substantial impact on producer's income and are large enough that it makes sense for governments to help with those costs, and that it be beyond a producer's capacity to manage even with the assistance available through existing programs.
That last point is what we've been trying to underscore: that we really attempt to use the other business risk management programs, and if they're not sufficient, that's typically when you would have an AgriRecovery initiative approved by governments.