Yes. We had that exact fight in the middle of it. One of the sections of our dike breached. It was built by the province after the flood in 1995, so it was up to the most standard code and it breached. We brought in teams right away. We brought in engineers the next morning. Copper Mountain Mine provided us free rock, tested free rock. The local logging contractors rebuilt it, but we were told at the time that it had to be temporary. We stood toe to toe against the provincial government to make sure that this wasn't going to be the case.
Communities know what needs to be done. When I talk about the need for federal intervention, it's not that we want the federal government to be there with this massive bureaucracy behind it. We need all levels of government to trust us. We know what needs to be done in our communities. We do the best job that we can do for them. We come at it with an environmental lens in everything. We do not look down the road and say, “Forget about a generation from now.” That's our priority.
When we ask for help, we need everybody to understand that when we're asking—it's hard to ask for help—you need to trust us, because it's not frivolous.