You said something very interesting. When the provinces reach a state where they can't handle a fire or emergency situation, your agency will step in and give assistance in many ways such as military, scientific, financial, equipment and so on.
We're seeing a situation in western Canada with the mountain pine beetle that came through Jasper National Park from British Columbia. British Columbia has been devastated from one end of the province to the other in all ways—east, west, north, south—and we're now seeing it emerge in the province of Alberta through the park. The park has done very little to mitigate or eradicate the pine beetle situation. They let it kind of flow through the park, and it has now gone through the entrance and is spreading through the western sectors of Alberta.
The Province of Alberta has spent hundreds of millions of dollars—and I think over just the last year it was $456 million—to eradicate them. Do you believe that the Government of Canada should be assisting? We assisted the Province of British Columbia back in the late 2000s with over $200 million to assist in trying to stop the pine beetle.
Do you feel it's necessary that, when a province can't handle the situation itself anymore and industry is taxed to a high level, the federal government should come into play beyond the research level?