Yes. I was going to offer two examples of why we do this. The Jay Treaty is one example. The other treaty is in the Migratory Birds Convention Act. Those are international agreements. One, the Jay Treaty, only goes one way, because Canada did not pass legislation to ratify the Jay Treaty. It did ratify, in the case of the migratory birds convention, by way of legislation. We thus have a Migratory Birds Convention Act that allows indigenous peoples to hunt migratory birds under the treaty right to hunt.
The same thing happens here, with this legislation. For the UN declaration to be implemented, we need this legislation to do it.
Why is it important to reconciliation? That's the primary goal I have in working on this. There are at least nine [Technical difficulty—Editor] in the bill.
To go back to the very first question about free, prior and informed consent, that and the declaration are calls to action for us to work together.
It's for us to work together; that's why this declaration is important. That's why we as a commission set it out as the primary principle. It is a call on us to work together—to have better working relationships, for example. That's why it's important. It really is key to going forward together.