Well, 80% of first nations communities are in the forest, and we would hope, because of our organization being the National Aboriginal Forestry Association, that there would be a discrete envelope of support for that sector. Given all the connections between prosperity, anti-poverty, the tax base, and the health of the rural economy, we would have hoped there would have been more investment in the aboriginal forest sector under that framework. Unfortunately, we somehow got missed in the shuffle.
That was a point the executive director was sure to tell me; he's recovering from back surgery. He said to make sure that I have some strong language on that and to say that now is the time.
You can always fix things, right? You can approach the aboriginal forest sector from the discrete economic side or you can approach it from the conservation side, and that is what's really unique about the aboriginal forest sector. It's really broad. There are multiple avenues for engaging and getting things done in the forest.