Sure.
Particularly on the northern coast, we do engage quite a bit with first nations. It's part of our marine contractor training program, which I talked about earlier. Some of them are fishermen; some of them are marine contractors. We do train them both on shoreline training for if the product does reach the beach. There are certain cleanup techniques that we train contractors in, as well as fishermen who might have their own vessels and who we might engage in the case of a spill.
The other point of interaction is that as part of our new mapping program, we've been approaching communities. This is a pilot project we did within Burrard Inlet, east of Second Narrows, where we approached the first nations groups and asked them to feed into our system, identify cultural sensitivities, for example, whether there's an archeological site or some other site that we would want to be aware of in case of a spill, so we could go out and boom that off during an incident.
Those are two points where we engage.