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Okay, last bit of weather here, I don't want to bore everybody to death. This is for us here in Canada. We have a new color-coded weather alert system and we borrowed this from the European Union. They sort of started doing this where they went with yellow alerts, orange alerts, and red alerts. And Environment Canada said, hey, this is a great idea. So they've moved to a color-coded alert system. That doesn't mean that warnings and watches or anything like that will be replaced, but they're basically doing is they're using three types of alert colors and symbols. They have yellow alerts and a yellow alert is yellow in color and it uses an exclamation point in the middle and what they'll basically do is they'll say yellow alert and then they'll have the warning or the watch or whatever it is and they'll explain in detail what's going on. So what a yellow alert means is hazardous weather may cause damage destruction or health impacts and the impacts are usually moderate localized or short term and yellow alerts are of course going to be the most common. The orange alerts again they're using an exclamation point as well as well but they're putting it in a in a box the first ones in a circle the second ones in a box and so what orange alerts mean severe weather is likely to cause significant damage disruption or health impacts and the impacts are generally considered major widespread or may last a few days and orange alerts are generally uncommon. That's what they're saying. Let me cycle it.

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