That's a big question for the one or two minutes remaining, but I'm going to summarize it by saying that the way you implement UNDRIP is that you build relationships and trust in an ongoing relationship. The federal government has a role because you need the necessary science and information, and the kinds of processes in which you have not just one decision, one big mind and one big development, but you have many decisions over time. You have to have a process to do that.
British Columbia is taking positive steps, but it's slow.
My big answer is that we can learn. There are many positives—the Koksilah, the Cowichan, for example—and there are a number of examples. We just need to do them at a much faster pace—how about at the pace that the climate is changing? We see it happening very rapidly, and you know that from your very own riding.