Thank you.
We don't have an official relationship with the Assembly of First Nations, but we are on Blackfoot territory, and we have very strong relationships with, as I mentioned, Siksika, which is a first nation just outside Calgary.
We also have both an aboriginal arts department and an aboriginal leadership and management department. Those departments are very plugged in to the 150 first nations across the country. We have people who come here from the territories, from Nunavut; there are Mi'kmaq from the east all the way across the country. In our aboriginal arts program in particular we try to enable them through our different programs. One is in voice, one is in dance, one is in writing, and we enable them to tell their stories and we support them in the telling of those stories. We co-produce work they've created. I mentioned the dance program. We do a number of different dance productions every year. We just did one this past summer. We have a program for aboriginal writers and we help them to produce the work that then forms books and magazine articles, etc.
We work with a whole variety of artists from within the first nations, and we have particular relationships, obviously, with some of the first nations based in Alberta that feel a particular bond with this territory.