Thank you for the question.
I don't think they're waiting at all. I talked about what happened in Mississauga. They were ready and they did extremely well. I talked about what happened in Gander, and they handled it extremely well. I'm only suggesting that the capacity is strained and that it's important that everyone be aware of everyone else's resources.
In the scheme of things, these were not huge events. They were very large events. They weren't vastly catastrophic like Katrina was vastly catastrophic. The resources of all are necessary in that sort of a circumstance.
What if a tanker car full of chlorine were to disintegrate in the middle of Toronto? That would be very difficult, and I think the resources of all would ultimately be needed. Perhaps that's a bad example, but that's what municipal governments do.
You were a municipal councillor. You know that you get the call. It's not your member of the National Assembly and it's not your MP who gets the call. They're hundreds of miles away, or perhaps thousands. It's you, and you will react and you will do all you can.