Thank you very much.
What happened is that indigenous groups opposed the fusion because they felt it infringed on their treaty rights.
There was a court challenge, the court issued an injunction, and the fusion didn't proceed.
We are stuck, but we're also stuck with the good things that were in the previous bill also frozen. This is a bill that will fix both things. We will agree with our indigenous partners and indigenous governments that the fusion wasn't in their best interests—to not have local knowledge and indigenous knowledge to take those decisions. As well, we'll be able to proceed with some of the really good things that were in the previous bill, such as the ability for a member of one of the boards, if there's a project being examined, to be allowed to continue on the examination of that project even when that member's term has expired, until that project has stopped and that decision is taken.
This is a matter of our getting rid of the bits they don't like, but proceeding, finally, with the things that they did like.