I think that very generally it is focused on outcomes. I think it imagines the agreements that can be made between indigenous governments and the Crown as being key facilitators to those outcomes.
The challenge of funding is one that we've talked through all the way. In different statutes, funding is handled in different ways. Sometimes it is written into legislation, and sometimes the regulatory process is the time and place for those funding conversations.
We believe that the outcomes of the child, the rights of indigenous children, the right to self-determination and the way in which indigenous children have to be treated within a system and their families and their communities all will get us to better outcomes
There is such massive complexity within the existing hodgepodge of systems that I'm not surprised, then, by the concerns that have come up, many of which are new to Inuit, because first nations and Métis in care and the systems across the country are very, very different, which is why we also wanted to focus on a distinction-based approach. We feel that there are provisions that protect the distinctions-based approach within this legislation as well.