There are a whole bunch of issues, right?
It goes back to previous comments. Significant percentages of these funds do oftentimes make their way to indigenous communities, but the gap is so large and, as you mentioned, if you don't make a meaningful change in the housing stock and the infrastructure that supports it, what happens is that you end up just patching over holes. You're spending all of your resources and all of your capacity basically trying to prevent the problem from getting worse instead of fixing it, and that's the challenge.
From a self-government standpoint, what we would say is that we need a strategy that specifically targets self-governing communities, because, as I said, we have a very different legal context from reserve communities. We often have jurisdiction that extends beyond just our treaty lands and covers our citizens throughout a far broader geographic area. For example, in Yukon, most jurisdiction is for citizens wherever they are in Yukon territory, not just within the community or within treaty lands.
We've started to see some success in working with Crown-Indigenous Relations to collaboratively develop solutions, and I think when it comes.... I can't speak to what the answer is for the on-reserve communities and non-self-governing urban nations, but for the nations that we're working with, I think we need a specific strategy that's collaboratively developed with Canada and the various departments and parties.