No, they haven't, and again, it's going to be really critical. I would ask the committee to visualize where we're at as the Assembly of First Nations. We have been given many assurances by the Prime Minister and other line ministries on a number of fronts.
Currently, there's the first ministers' meeting that will take place October 3, the law and policy review, and we have a fiscal table. Those are three critical tables that the AFN is just now getting to in any meaningful way. It's very challenging.
If you try to take the issue of, say, the environmental legislation that is being reviewed right now in this country, and look at the cannabis bill, the process of reviewing, engaging, and making determination of where capacity is needed has to be done well in advance. The legislative process, the capacity, and the mutually agreed-upon processes as to how we're going to gel and work together to meet a collective outcome are going to be the challenge. That is simply not happening with this government.