Thank you.
I think the Assembly of First Nations, and first nations generally, have done quite a bit of outreach in trying to engage everyone who has an interest in this issue to have a discussion and work things out. An example of that was the mining and energy conference that was held in June, earlier this year, where governments were invited, industry was invited, and they participated in a very constructive discussion. But it's the beginning. It can't be the end, and when the meeting ends the issues and the topic are forgotten.
I think we put forth a recommendation that the state--in this case, Canada--needs to work with the first nations governments to help shape and inform legislation that is going to address the relationship issues that are critical. When you get the James Bay agreement, or any other land claim agreement, it's a relationship that is created, and it's done by agreement, not imposed legislatively or by unilateral decisions on the part of decision-makers.