Thank you very much for the question.
The huge opportunity we have in British Columbia right now is to see these proactive investments in the work that's happening to restore our natural infrastructure. As you said, our watersheds ultimately are nature's infrastructure and they provide the resilience that we need for our communities.
One of the challenges is that we are putting billions of dollars into rebuilding traditional hard infrastructure following devastating disasters, which needs to happen at times, but when you look at the health of the watersheds surrounding some of our highways, we're in no better situation than we were before. What we find is that we can get siloed into how we are funding the work that needs to happen. This is where we've already seen some unique opportunities in British Columbia with the investments that have happened in watersheds.
If we can start to make decisions and do the planning at the local regional level that needs to happen, where we can bring the federal government, the provincial government, and the philanthropic and private sectors together to invest in the work that needs to happen proactively, we have a huge opportunity to create more healthy, resilient and climate-safe communities.