Not only is it a complex file, but it is also one that is very hard to approach. To my mind, it is the approach that matters.
The Mohawks, who will be appearing before the committee even though we have met with just about all of them here, do not recognize or have a hard time recognizing the Assembly of First Nations. They are totally off on their own, whether it be the Akwesasne, Kanesatake or Kahnawake community, and that is just in Quebec. I will let my Ontario colleagues speak to the communities in Ontario.
Is there no way to resolve disputes through mediation, a mediator, or if we take the idea a bit further, through binding arbitration? As you, yourself, said, you still have to go to cabinet for claims over $150 million. So government intervention can still impede the negotiations process, given that you have to seek a mandate from cabinet, which often results in an altered mandate and so forth. But if these files were put before the Specific Claims Tribunal of Canada, the tribunal's decision would be final and conclusive, and would not be subject to appeal.
I read everything produced by the Senate on the topic, and I have the same question. Would it not be possible to pursue mediation, for example, or even binding arbitration that would be binding on the two parties? Basically, the problem is finding a resolution that is binding on both parties. I am, of course, referring to specific claims valued at more than $150 million. I am not talking about land claims, which are a whole other can of worms, according to what you told us.
I am wondering whether we could not find a solution where you would not always be required, even at the justice level, to go to cabinet, to keep going back and forth for years on end, because it is not a matter of months, but years.