Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, I guess first and foremost, each community should have their own emergency management operation plan. They should have it in place. And if they don't, we as the regional -- our regional staff will be in there working with them. We created five new positions for emergency management. So -- that we can help work with them. One of the after-action review things is that I'm looking at -- we need at least another five more positions at the regional level to do the recovery and work with these communities. So that's part of the conversation that we're having.
In regards to fire breaks and fire smarting the communities, as I said, last -- with the last question is NWTAC has money. Each community of the 29 communities have money that they can access through NWTAC. Unfortunately, the money that NWTAC got, they don't get it until next year from the federal government. But what they have said, and they have worked with the federal government, that they can do the work that needs to be done now. If they want to do -- fire smart the community and reach out to the community -- or NWTAC to see what their share is, what they get from that, and then they can do the work this year and then as of April 1st can then give the invoice to NWTAC and they get reimbursed back that way. So we're all working together for this. And as, again, we are doing an after-action review with MACA and ECC. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.