Beyond the supports that are needed for the treaty process, so that we can start recognizing those economic benefits--the study you mentioned about land management--there are other initiatives that are directly related to, if I can put it this way, helping Indian reserves to work. That's what we're talking about with the land management act. We're talking about the Indian reserve lands. We're not talking about the treaty settlement lands. That's going to be a different scenario.
We see that things like the land management act are very real stepping stones. They help first nations learn how to manage their land within the Indian reserve. When they're at the point of managing larger treaty settlement lands, they will be in a position to do so. All of that capacity building will have happened.
We totally support that. There are other areas, too, where the Indian Act, the way it is now, can be enhanced so that it does benefit economic development. One of the major areas on all of our Indian reserves across this country, mine included....
I served on my council for 30 years. I know just how difficult it is to get support for putting in infrastructure for economic development. Indian Affairs does not have that as a mandate, so there's no money out there. The banks don't look at us because we're Indian reserve lands. There's nowhere you can go to get the financial resources you need to put in that infrastructure.
And yet every community around us has that infrastructure. If somebody wants to set up a little store, they go to the local municipality, they get the permit, and they hook into the water and sewer. Try to set up a store on an Indian reserve. You have to find your own water. You have to find your own sewer. You have to do all that. The infrastructure doesn't exist.
There's no funding to do that infrastructure from Indian Affairs--nor should there be, quite frankly--but there is a way that we can pool our resources as first nations, the way the municipalities do. We have something called the First Nations Finance Authority. If you're not familiar with that, I'd ask you to become familiar with it.
Through the First Nations Finance Authority--right now we're under the auspices of the MFA, the Municipal Finance Authority, which gives us triple-A ratings--we can go out into the bond market and raise our own money for that infrastructure.
It's taken us 15 years of fighting with every bureaucratic inertia to get this thing to happen. I had anticipated that we'd be able to put out our first bond, which would probably be in the neighbourhood of $100 million, this year.
Well, I'll tell you, folks, it's not going to happen this year. We still don't have all the little ducks in a row. Hopefully it will happen next year.
That will be a time when all Canadians can celebrate, when first nations communities can come together. We can support each other, just like all of your municipalities do, to create that infrastructure for economic development.
I know I went a little way off the treaty thing, but it's not just all about treaties; it's about how we prepare and how we can use what exists now, which is the Indian Act and the Indian reserve lands, to help us move forward so that we are in a position to take full advantage when we have treaties settled.