We continue to work with the federal government on any directions on the security of our research, the knowledge we create and the knowledge we organize with any particular entity. Guidance and advice from the federal government are always sought. I would say this is a very new landscape for the universities. We are learning how to do better and also how to comply with all of the new requirements that are coming through. There are quite a few conversations on that.
What we need to figure out, within that space, is how not to lose time, ability and speed when we have something very sensitive that we need to mobilize somewhere. I think we are in the early stage of this particular new environment of national security and the security of our research enterprise. We are looking after three or four medical research facilities at the University of Saskatchewan—from vaccines to a synchrotron to a nuclear cyclotron, and we continue to work together with the federal government. Again I will submit that speed is the key. We need to find a way not to slow things down any further from where we are.