In terms of phase one, there certainly is enough land to be purchased or selected in both provinces, but if you're purchasing land it's obviously on a willing buyer and willing seller basis. So the first nations want to be able to sit back and wait until those lands that they want are available.
On the selection of crown land, it's again a process where the province would have to go through its process to determine whether it wishes to release those lands, because there are certain things that it can withhold the lands for.
But with respect to phase one in general, under our process the first nation has to submit a band council resolution, and what we're finding is that in phase two, which is the part that the regional offices undertake, there's a lot of back and forth between the regional office and first nations on getting more details about their selection, which often isn't in the BCR, the band council resolution. And so what we're hoping the NALMA work will do is establish a little more rigorous proposal-based system where the first nation will have a certain amount of detailed information that it will submit, but it's the kind of information that a diligent buyer would require and that's the kind of information that the community obviously would want. So that coincidentally is the same type of information we need to run our process.
So I think that will make it easier to determine when the clock should start running on phase two and allow us to better gauge how long the process is taking, because right now the BCR will come in, but with this back and forth we don't really know where that clock should start ticking.