To address your question in a different way, transparency and accountability, which are articulated in this bill, go to one aspect of financial administration, and that is reporting. As we know, those first nations that are involved in the First Nations Financial Transparency Act, which used to be called the First Nations Fiscal and Statistical Management Act until the funding was cut, have gone through a process, a community-driven process, to look at financial administration from a more holistic perspective in terms of how we raise finances, budget expenditures, and the decisions that are made within our nations to ultimately report those expenditures.
In terms of Bill C-27...and the ultimate objective that I think we have around this table is, how we can support first nations and build capacity? I would say, with respect, that Bill C-27 does nothing to support or build capacity within first nations. It seeks to disclose financial statements in terms of what a first nation is doing on that end. In terms of supporting first nations and building capacity and building institutions of good government, this bill does not address that, in my opinion.
We, the first nations, are seeking to work in partnership with you, the lawmakers, around this table to develop appropriate mechanisms, the tools that are necessary to support first nations capacity-building and to develop those institutions of government we're faced with right now and want to pursue.