All right.
I will just say, first of all, that what we are doing is working with a variety of different indigenous organizations, including the AFN, to look at ways the government can transfer the responsibility for indigenous procurement, the indigenous business directory, to indigenous organizations. So far, as you would know, there isn't a consensus yet.
I've been thinking a lot about consensus in this space. There often isn't a consensus in Parliament, as you know, on legislation, on approaches. I think that sometimes the federal government looks for consensus in indigenous places or indigenous spaces in an unrealistic or maybe an unfair way.
We are working with partners right now about how best to transfer the responsibility for indigeneity and proof of indigeneity without driving towards a one-list solution. That may be part of the evolution of how this goes, simply because, as I've gotten to know the partners, it appears that consensus may not be feasible in this space. That is a reality with such a diverse group of indigenous people across the country.