I think terminating the funding agreement would likely be the absolute last resort.
By the way, I've had an opportunity to look at what was then called the “intervention policy”. I'm sure you're familiar with the intervention policy. It's sort of a three-step process. This is when a first nation gets into financial difficulty; there's a plan that's asked for by the federal government. The next step is some sort of co-management notion, and then a final step is some sort of third management. So there's kind of a layering up of intervention as the problem is looked at and maybe not addressed.
In some sense, this is somewhat similar, and I would think that almost all of these issues would be likely resolved at the first level, which is the federal government saying we'd like a plan for how you're going to redress this. As in the intervention policy, that seems to be the bulk of the ways in which any remedy is reached.
I would guess that obviously there would be no funding cut for any kind of essential services like education, social assistance, or any of those programs that are absolutely essential. I can't imagine the federal government cutting those programs. What it might cut is band support funding. Again, I would see that as a very small minority of cases, but that would be one lever they could use, which is essentially supporting the salaries of chief and council. I would see that likely being the area where funds would be withheld. It would be unimaginable if they were to withhold funds for education, social assistance, and the like.