There are quite a number of examples right across the country.
When we talk about economic reconciliation as it applies to lands, one of the examples I gave was in the city of Winnipeg with the Kapyong properties. That development alone will translate to literally billions of dollars for the regional economy. The development at Tsuut’ina by Calgary is, again, a billion-dollar development, because first nations have not only the land but also the jurisdiction over those lands.
Another example is close to downtown Vancouver with the Squamish first nation. They're doing a multitower residential development. Again, it's over a billion dollars. You have that kind of scale of potential right across the country.
Of course, on the lower end of the spectrum, you have communities that really are.... Some by the city of Merritt have lost virtually all of their land as a result of flooding and forest fires. It's a matter of rebuilding those properties and giving them the tools that are necessary to redevelop their lands without complete dependence on the federal and provincial governments.
Of course, I believe in interdependence, but what we need with first nation governments is for them to have their own sources of revenues and their own jurisdictions over their lands. In order to facilitate that, we have to be able to have our own land title system.
Under the present system under the Canadian Constitution right now, “Indian reserve” means whose title “is vested in His Majesty for the use and benefit of a band” of Indians. That's antiquated. That's from the 19th century. What we have to do is put that in our colonial past and look forward to a future where first nations have the jurisdiction and the land title that our ancestors have always talked about.