Certainly there are active negotiating tables for both the Akaitcho as well as the Dehcho regions. Those are two big outstanding claims. There's also a claim with the Northwest Métis that's outstanding.
So there is a negotiating table. There are issues related to financial compensation. There are issues related to acceptance of the land quantum that would be transferred in terms of surface or subsurface rights and how the selection process will take place, and then there are issues with respect to acceptance of the resource management regime that will apply over that territory.
In the case of the Dehcho, we've accepted to move forward in parallel on the development of an interim land use plan. So in parallel with the negotiations, we're also talking about the land use plan, which is a bit of an exceptional situation, but the land use plan will not be concluded until such time as there's an overall agreement on the claim.
The other thing we've put in place, particularly in the Dehcho, is interim measures where both parties agree to under which condition development can take place. So it's not as if it's completely a no man's land; there are conditions under which there's agreement, and there are companies that are doing business in those areas that are doing quite well. They developed good relationships with the local first nations, and that development is going ahead right now.