There are many sides to this.
For jurisdictions like municipalities, provinces, territories and the federal government, which have had an ambition for a certain percentage of procurement that is indigenous procurement, there's an incentive to meet that target. For those who wish to fraudulently take advantage of this particular space, there is an opportunity to find a way to be an indigenous business, to then take advantage of that material advantage, as Angela has described.
First nations, Inuit and Métis who have secured section 35 status have created constructive arrangements, whether they be modern treaties or other arrangements, with the Government of Canada and often have economic development considerations within them. They are now competing with another class. They are now competing with another class of, I would say, bad actors within this space that governments have been unwilling to hold to account.
We need to go back into the relationship between.... For our case, for Inuit, we've gone through 40 to 50 years of treaty-making with the Government of Canada. We have worked with you to compromise and create structures that we now are demanding the Government of Canada abide by. We didn't ever anticipate that our Inuit businesses would be in competition with newly formed indigenous collectives that don't have section 35 status and just assert that they are an indigenous collective and then, all of a sudden, are eligible to bid on opportunities alongside the structures that we've created.