To answer the first part of your question, we are seeing the uptake increasing rapidly. I think you would be very impressed to come into our communities in the Yukon and see how many of the young people are going on and completing degrees and post-graduate degrees. And many of them are returning. We have first nations lawyers from our communities, first nations engineers, and first nations geoscientists who are coming back and really participating in those negotiations—the drawing of maps and boundaries, the issues of mineral rights, etc.
You ask about cross-boundary. I'm not as familiar with land treaty negotiations outside of Canada and Alaska, but certainly just yesterday I was talking to one of the Yukon negotiators. He used to be a chancellor at our college. He has recently returned from Alaska, because they continue to seek input from the Alaska experience, particularly around oil and gas. It is further ahead than we are, so we can learn from not only its successes, but also its mistakes. We will certainly incorporate some of that research into our programming.