Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Good morning to each of you.
You know what they say: The bill is “good intentioned”, but we know where the road paved with good intentions goes, and we see some of that reflected, I guess, in the comments. Virtually every single aboriginal leader who has come before us has said that this bill is deeply flawed. There's not only the matter of physically acting. I would say to my colleagues, you must act in the right and proper way. You can act to assimilate. You can act to undermine communal rights. You can act to undermine the inherent right of self-government of aboriginal communities.
As I understand it, there is a right to consultation. It is not necessarily that nebulous. The court has ruled that when something is affecting the aboriginal people or communities, they have to be consulted.
I wanted to ask this question. There seems to be a little difference in the two positions. Of course, everybody has the right to have their own position. I would say to Mr. Toulouse, you say there are six conditions that should be met for this to go forward. If all of those conditions were to be met by some amendment through this committee, if that were even possible, would you feel adequately consulted? Would that then satisfy the communities that you represent? I'm just surmising. If we could meet all those six conditions through an amendment in the bill, would that be satisfactory to you?
Mr. Picard, your situation seems a little different. You're saying we haven't met the basics in terms of consultation, and therefore we need to go back and start from a right-relationship perspective, understanding the bigger picture around collectives and inherent rights and things of that nature.
So could you just comment on that?