Yes. The intent is to make sure that all of the capacities are self-reliant and self-resilient. When I went to federal finance minister Morneau's office with the Teslin Tlingit Council chief, we talked about how partnerships with municipal governments and first nations governments actually help make sure that the dollars we get in federal transfers stay in Yukon, and therefore we develop resilience in these communities and self-reliance in these communities. In the long-term picture this is good for Canada. This is good for our economy as well.
Our goal is to strike that balance between making sure we keep that money in Yukon and actually keep these communities competitive. You don't want to be creating monopolies. That doesn't help either. But as long as we make sure that the partnerships we can create....
This is where self-governance and modern treaties come into play, more so in Yukon than in other jurisdictions in Canada. With these modern treaties come federally and constitutionally protected chapters on economic diversification. We're going to become very creative in making sure we use these modern treaties to maximize the potential to build resilience in our communities.