Thank you,
Mr. Chairman. The response is basically one, in the case of Trout Lake, where once we were notified there was an issue, we responded immediately to make sure we went in there and contacted the other related agencies. We wanted to make sure the appropriate steps were taken to contain and limit and then look at remediation. As I indicated to the Member in the House, of course there are a number of other groups involved, including Northland Utilities, which has a primary responsibility.
Part of our job as well is, once we’ve contained it and remediated it, to make sure to do a debriefing and review of what happened and why and what steps do we take, working once again with other agencies, to make sure we try to avoid situations like that, where there’s a valve failure because of ground moving. There are always issues that come up in people’s minds, as we’ve talked about, in terms of climate change, the ground shifting, those types of things. That would be basically what our role is.