 Accessibility is important because parks are for everyone and we need to ensure that everyone feels comfortable and excited and supported and we need to ensure that absolutely everyone is able to access our parks. So when designing and upgrading our parks, one of the most important pieces of feedback is from our user groups and we get that from an accessibility committee that we work with which involves different ministries and government as well as different disability advocate groups and nonprofit groups. So BC Parks and Power2B have been working together for a couple years really to move the notion that everyone belongs in nature. Really trying to connect the dots so that we can provide more access to the wild places that BC Parks takes care of and so Power2B has more places to actively go. So the Rick Hansen Foundation Accessibility Certification Program was born and the purpose of that was to get everybody on the same page. As BC Parks staff we took part in accessibility training which was really fantastic. As part of that training we were actually able to get out into a park with the Rick Hansen Foundation and it was really eye-opening to kind of experience our park in that way. So we have a team at BC Parks that works on upgrading all our facilities and campgrounds and there's a lot of planning that goes into these projects to make sure that they're universally accessible to all people. Some specific improvements in BC Parks include making our toilet facilities more accessible, improving mobility and accessibility around parking areas and campsites as well as creating access to some natural areas and features for people that might be living with disabilities. And more recently mountain biking as well so making trails that are equipped for adaptive mountain bikes and the access to those trails as well. BC Parks has been amazing in terms of trying to get all the different stakeholders and user groups together to get their feedback, understand what's important to them. Our community partners are involved in these processes because every community is different and one project in one area of the province might not necessarily work in another so we need to be ensuring that we're working with our community partners to make those kind of things happen. BC Parks deserves a lot of credit because what they're doing is they're leading, they're not following, they're not waiting for someone to come along and say you have to do this and BC Parks has stepped up and said no, the need is now, we're acting now. Accessible design, universal design, it's not designed for people with disabilities, it's just better designed.