I can definitely take that for the Public Health Agency work. I'll ask my colleague Hartaj to speak to the cybersecurity work in a moment.
The work we did to support the Public Health Agency was focused primarily on helping them to analyze and plan for the operational impacts of all the evolving policies that were happening under the Quarantine Act during the pandemic. This included both detailed and extensive stakeholder engagement within government and helping them to facilitate discussions outside of government—for example, with the travel sector, air operators and so on.
We also were asked to provide global leading expertise and access to information through KPMG's global network of colleagues to help inform policies that were forming here in Canada. For example, we reached out through our global network to the Five Eyes countries and to other jurisdictions to learn how they were handling the COVID-19 pandemic, quarantine, and quarantine restrictions, and then eventually how they were handling things like lab testing, vaccine administration, documentation and so on for international travel.
The other thing I'll mention is that at that time, KPMG was providing very specialized expertise to the Public Health Agency to address what we understood were some capability gaps in terms of being able to quickly support their detailed planning in things like human-centred design. We were trying to understand what the traveller's experience would be through all of these policy changes and operational changes at the borders. We were developing journey maps and process designs, all at a very, very rapid pace, to support their constantly evolving policy environment.
That essentially was the nature of the work we did under the Public Health Agency.
Maybe I'll let Hartaj speak to the other work.