Kelowna asked for 0.5% of the GDP. I don't know where the other 99.5% is going. Anyway, all the resources on our territory, all the future growth and the very economic prosperity of this country will depend on activity on first nations lands, and we have to be a part of the solution and part of the opportunities—of course, respecting the environment and the future generations.
I think the key is that it was a good plan, a plan that I don't think had any political stripes and that involved all of the parties. It also involved all the aboriginal leaders. I think the way it was timed wasn't the best, perhaps—there was a switch in government—but there's certainly nothing wrong with it. There are a lot of positive and strong points in it, much as there were some good things in the FNGA and some bad things in the FNGA. I think these things have to be given some wheels, and the rubber has to hit the pavement.
Is it dead? I don't know whether it's dead. I don't have the latest update on it.