Thank you, Mr. Chair. So each week, ENR informs the public of the location of the mobile zone by sharing updated maps with Indigenous governments and Indigenous organizations, posting on the ENR web page, social media, and along winter roads, and in communities.
We've been working with leaders from Indigenous governments and organizations and harvesters to promote harvest from healthy caribou herds. So there are still opportunities to harvest from the Beverly herd and from other herds and from alternate species like moose and fish. For Tlicho communities, opportunities exist to harvest from the Beverly herd and with authorization cards provided, the Bluenose-East caribou herd.
In January, the Minister committed to provide some additional funds to support alternative harvest to the Tlicho government and other Indigenous governments and organizations whose Members have traditionally harvested from the Bathurst herd. And I'd just like to add at the end that seizures only happen if there's an investigation into an illegal harvest. That's under the Wildlife Act. Thank you, Mr. Chair.