It's a good question. Thanks.
You mentioned a really good point there. I think what you've seen from Tzeachten is that the increase in tax revenue streams and the increase in own-source revenue has enabled us to shift away from a dependency—I hate using that word—on federal transfers.
At the end of the day, a lot of what we're all working toward is economic self-sufficiency for our first nations communities. What that means is that we have the autonomy to develop our own programs, install our own infrastructure and work in partnership with governments, rather than depending on governments.
I think the big shift that Tzeachten has taken is that, for any of the projects we have on the go, we contribute. We contribute to all of it. For any kind of jurisdiction that we're looking at overtaking or looking at assuming, we make sure we have revenues that top up those jurisdictions, because the sad reality is that we have a lot of healing to do. We have a lot of work to address what a lot of our community needs.
What we can do with our sustainable revenue streams is much greater than what we can do with government transfers. I think we can begin to address infrastructure gaps, housing needs and program needs and really begin to heal our communities. To be quite honest, we can do it a lot better without the government. I think that's something where, with these increases in revenue streams and tax streams, we can do the work that's needed in our communities.
Thank you.