Yes.
As my colleague Shannin mentioned, we have developed a definition of indigenous businesses, and we are going through our own organizations to engage and make sure everybody is on board with this, but essentially it's looking at our communities from a community perspective: We know who our people are.
The cost of false indigeneity or companies that can access projects that were set aside for indigenous businesses is huge. It takes up space that was created for our businesses. Most often, these shell companies aren't looking to hire our own people. Furthermore, the wealth that would accrue from this contract isn't returned to the indigenous community.
It's a pervasive problem. We're hearing about it across academia, within the public service and within businesses. It's out there and it's problematic.