First nations are government. They're not in the business of doing business and they are not entrepreneurs; they are government. They do need as much help and in-house resources as they can get.
We're not the only department that is not funded sufficiently. Education across the board is not funded sufficiently, like anything else. The only way for us to get ahead of that is to have some in-house resources and revenues.
One way to do that is by looking at the local economy, setting up a scholarship to help our students get to school or helping build a park or a health centre. This is where benefits could go to the community.
There is a difference between indigenous entrepreneurs, who are not government and.... You don't want the government to be involved in this. I mean, if for some reason I'm an entrepreneur and I don't like the chief and the chief doesn't like me, I get nothing. This is why they never worked for fisheries and never worked for forestry. They gave the allocations to the community, and then the chief and council, who had no background in fisheries or forestry, made these decisions. This comes back full circle here. That's where we are today, and we need to look at ways that we can benefit the communities through aboriginal benefits, which would be a percentage to help with scholarships or anything within the region where that work is being done.