I would say that in our case, reducing flights in many provinces and stations in Atlantic Canada was a difficult decision to make.
We have been operating in certain of these markets for 75 years, dating from the time of Trans-Canada airline. Contrary to our competitor, we are trying to keep at least one station in each province to keep provinces linked to our network.
I would say with regard to re-establishing routes that I have had many discussions on that. We have talked to mayors and we have talked to the premier, and we had exchanges with them on the impact and on how we can work together going forward, but I guess fundamentally to restore services, we need passengers. There has to be demand to have a service.
The policies in place, particularly in Atlantic Canada, have had a devastating impact on the number of passengers. That's why we need to have a conversation and a path forward for a national reopening of travel at least within Canada first.