I have to point out that the bill passed in late 2019, only a few months before the pandemic began, so I would say that implementation here in British Columbia is still at a very early stage. We are still waiting on the action plan, but that has been a bit disrupted by the pandemic and the conditions in the province, especially in indigenous communities.
The province did table its first annual report, which you can google and find online. It is substantive. There are plenty of good-news stories to report out of British Columbia. Of course, there are some bad-news stories to report out of British Columbia as well. To my mind, this is a normal part of political conversation and of the political context. There will be successes, and there will be failures. It's our responsibility to sort through those.
It's important to note that those successes and those failures do coexist simultaneously. I also want to point out that it is quite normal, if we look across the country, for there to be policy successes and policy failures on any issue, and also contestation. This is a normal element of politics and any sort of political decision-making.
To address the earlier comment as well about what is the indigenous opinion on any of these issues across the country, well, it's as diverse as the non-indigenous opinion on any political topic. I just would like to bring to you that this norm and what we understand as normal in everyday politics extends to indigenous peoples as well.