It's been a challenge. We'll be honest. This is a big initiative. You can imagine, many jurisdictions, provincial governments, and first nations are very key in this.
When the agreement was signed, there was a need to do some reconciliation with first nations to build and respect their rights and interests, and have them feel they were part of the plan and that it accommodated their needs as well. I think that's an important message to everyone in the national conservation plan, that accommodating people's interests, whoever they are, in whatever form—municipal governments, first nations—is an important part of the mix.
Our experience is that having the multi-stakeholder dialogues and these opportunities to bring people together is absolutely key in building lasting solutions. Whenever we don't do that and we miss engaging people—first nations communities—it tends to come back and bite us and slow things down.
I would say that in the last couple of years there's been some good work rebuilding that stakeholder network, working with first nations, and recommitting some funding around the targets we're going to move on.