That's a good question. I don't know if it still exists. However, I think there are variations of entrepreneurship going on throughout Canada. Shannin may be able to offer up an answer on that too.
It's vitally important. I think where we try to come across is that it has to be in balance, meaning that, yes, you can have entrepreneurship, but when you're within our communities, it's more about job creation and sustaining a livelihood, rather than profit being the main motivator.
I think there are options for that. You're finding communities going through the additions to reserve process now, or starting to develop profitable businesses in urban centres and taking those profits and bringing them back to the community for social programming and for educational purposes, such as becoming an entrepreneur or, in our case, an economic development officer, which all still brings it together. There are so many entrepreneurship programs for our indigenous youth, but there still have to be more specialized programs depending on the age and depending on the region and what industry they are in. We have to look at all of this.
We're going to have our national conference out at Membertou next year. Look at Clearwater Industries and what happened there, where the First Nations Finance Authority was able to provide capital so that indigenous groups could buy out that corporation and have a lot of input into that local economy. There are examples like that one that we have to cite and continue the process.