Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I'd like to thank the witnesses for meeting here this afternoon.
My question is for the National Aboriginal Forestry Association, and then I'll probably segue to all of you near the end.
I come from northern Saskatchewan, where timber harvesting is very prominent. We're seeing that the market is fluctuating through some very tough times and is trying to make ends meet. In northern Saskatchewan we have a large aboriginal population of Métis and first nations. We have a couple of examples of forest industries; NorSask is one, owned by Meadow Lake Tribal Council.
In that area, forestry is really almost the driving economic hub, and we see development also taking place in natural resources for oil sands. We see other opportunities up north in rare earths and a number of other things. However, I'll basically focus on forestry.
Patuanak, a small and remote first nations community with not a very good road going in or coming out, has developed a bridge into some very pristine virgin timber. It hasn't been accessed before. We've seen the first nation community actually take the initiative to harvest the resource there.
Now I'm wondering about economic development. We see the woodland caribou strategy coming forward, and I see how the opposition is pushing for that woodland caribou strategy. We see how the David Suzuki Foundation is utilizing the website by inappropriate means through the submission process.
What I'm really getting at is that under the woodland caribou strategy that's being finalized here—I think the submission deadline was February 22 or 23 of this year—I wonder how the strategy for your area will be affected. We see northern Saskatchewan being focused on by the woodland caribou strategy as the incubator for the recovery process—just northern Saskatchewan—but it's going to affect Alberta, Manitoba, Quebec, and areas over into Newfoundland and Labrador as well. Right now, it's Saskatchewan that's going to be facing the test, I should say.
Looking at this and wildlife habitat protection initiatives, I'm wondering how the aboriginal communities are going to derive an economic benefit from the forest resources that surround them. What type of consultation are you doing with the aboriginal and first nations communities to promote economic development?