I might just jump in really quickly.
We have some friendship centres that are serving people from about 50 or more first nations, and Inuit and Métis who are outside their homeland, as well as Inuit who either are not beneficiaries of an Inuit land claim agreement or are just living in the south. It's important that we cannot run sustainable, reliable and effective community-driven urban organizations just agreement by agreement, hoping to get something from a first nations, Métis or Inuit government or from multiple first nations, Métis or Inuit governments.
It's really important to recognize that there is a community within the urban setting. In some cities, such as Winnipeg, Toronto, Edmonton and Vancouver, we're three or four generations in. These aren't people who are just coming from the reserve anymore; these aren't just people visiting. These are very well-ingrained communities.
It's really important to ensure that if something is available to an indigenous person somewhere, it should be available to an indigenous person anywhere. Our rights are portable. They are rooted in who we are as people. That's what we're trying to go to. For some organizations, it just makes sense for indigenous peoples across distinctions to come together to provide supports for that community.