No. I think it's been known since SARA came into force that the boreal caribou was an important species to develop a recovery strategy for, so early work was undertaken, but aboriginal peoples were not engaged right from the beginning.
So what we've done is to say, okay, the work that has been done is helpful and will be useful, but from here forward, we're going to engage with our aboriginal people, who really live in harmony with the caribou, as well as engaging with industry and science. So we have this three-pronged approach of getting new science to help us define how we operationalize the critical habitat identification. We have a stream of work collecting aboriginal traditional knowledge and community knowledge, as well as consultations more broadly, and it's under way as we speak.