It's not necessarily reaching agreement to move forward. We strive and aim to achieve consent, but it's not a prerequisite for moving forward. We don't have a predefined notion of how we're going to consult with any individual community. Each community is different. We start out our consultations with those communities with an open mind and open perspective, wanting to learn from them how they wish to be consulted and what their governance mechanisms are. When there are clear splits, as in that example, we would want to hear various perspectives so that they can be considered.
It's not a rights recognition process that we're doing. We want to hear what the issues and concerns and perspectives are, even if they vary across the membership of the community, so that we can consider them and, if reasonable, work with the proponent and our regulators and through our enforceable conditions to address those impacts.