Great. Thanks very much.
If I could, Ms. Campbell, I'll ask a couple of questions and then get out of the way and see how much of the five minutes is left at the end of the round. You mentioned some specific changes to the ASETS program, that you believe would be of great benefit if they were included in the program. I'm going to ask you to identify them.
To Heather, and probably to Noront as well, I thought Cory McPhee was pretty candid in the last group of witnesses when he said some of the older ASETS didn't do a really good job with some of the first nations stuff, and they're better at it now with the new play they've just opened in Sudbury. I know that Suncor has been committed to trying to get it right and continually do better with first nations communities, and we heard that through the Syncrude testimony here as well.
So when some of the newer players go into a newer community it's about sharing the range of opportunity that tumbles when you come in to develop a mining play. You guys are way past that now. If anybody doesn't know about the opportunities with Suncor and Syncrude in Fort McMurray, then they've been living on another planet. I guess it's probably a constant reassessment of where you are, but I would think that anybody who's motivated to get involved in the industry and to earn a living from the industry is probably already there.
Is Suncor around 7% aboriginal right now?