I would say that many municipalities and first nations work in partnership in order to share water resources. I spoke about source water protection, but there are also shared infrastructure resources happening across the country. I wouldn't point to your examples as ubiquitous.
I would also point to the fact, maybe going back to the previous questions, that first nations manage their own jurisdictions and their affairs for water. In some cases, first nations want to see their own supply and their own infrastructure built on their own lands, and we are ready to support that, and we do. For each long-term drinking water advisory....
There are 634 first nations in this country—