Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you to the witnesses.
I think my residual questions after this great discussion are probably going to come up with the same result as my colleague Jean's and other questions that have been asked.
I'll go back to one thing, if I could, Warren. You were describing issues around third-party encumbrances. If I got my note down correctly here, you identified that a key issue is that most lands have third-party encumbrances. Many of them are not registered in any title process, for example, or certainly as government would go in terms of its roles at all levels. There may be other industries with some sort of bundle of rights or what have you, maybe even an individual person.
The trouble arises when there is no process to create or negotiate replacement agreements. I think you were probably more clear in using legal nomenclature; no instruments available, is what you said.
I can't help but think, based on your discussion today, that you might have a couple of solutions that are floating around in your work on the management public policy side. I know a couple of minutes won't do it justice, but I don't think I heard what some of them might be.