I think what the previous witness has said is exactly right in terms of working with the communities. Right now, we work within the jurisdictions in Canada to issue alerts, so the federal government, primarily Environment and Climate Change Canada, and then all the provincial and territorial public safety agencies. They typically decide within their jurisdiction who gets to issue an alert. We heard a bit about that from Ms. Jesty. Obviously this is a different case. It's really important to work with the communities. If we were given that direction by our board, we would do that. If the alternative is another private company doing it, we would want to step up and do that as well.
We hear it's a different use case and the witnesses talked about having maybe a clearing house to share information on where victims may have been seen and about protecting privacy. This is different from what alerts are used for right now. We could build all of that. We would want everything to be processed by the national system. That's what it's made for. This is a national issue. I think that this should be part of the national system, but we recognize that it would be important to have this consultation with and direction from those it affects the most.