The negotiation itself went fairly well. We started formal negotiations in October of 2010, with a restructuring of the parks with Parks Canada. We lost about six months of negotiations with illness. With other things, we lost another two months. We reached AIP stage in 2013, so that was an agreement in principle on the establishment agreement. We sat on that AIP until 2015, after the Government of the Northwest Territories assumed administrative control over all of the Northwest Territories.
We then re-engaged those discussions, after the Government of the Northwest Territories settled, and we reached a tripartite agreement between Canada, the Northwest Territories, and Lutsel K’e Dene on divvying up these Thaidene Nene areas of interest. Now it's 14,000 square kilometres as proposed federally protected area, 12,000 as a proposed territorial park, and another 2,000 where it's a wildlife designation area for caribou.