Thank you.
I'd like to return to a comment made earlier, I think, by Mr. Marshall—or perhaps somebody else—about remote and northern indigenous communities and how they can play a role.
We obviously have vast areas in our country where it's very difficult to get professionals out on the land, water or ice to collect this data. Community members have been doing more of that for the scientists of Canada. I would like to name three programs I've come across, and I'm wondering whether Environment Canada uses data from these—perhaps just comment in general.
One is the Nunavik sentinels project, promoted by Espace pour la vie in Montreal. It gets community members in Nunavik in northern Quebec, especially young people, out on the land to collect information on insects. The Arctic Eider Society in Sanikiluaq, by Hudson Bay, does similar things, and there's a new phone app called SIKU through the Indigenous Knowledge Social Network, which promotes the gathering of this sort of data.
Is Environment Canada using any of these programs in northern Canada?