Thank you for those comments.
I think what we are doing is, to a large degree, positioning ourselves to take steps into new territory. Of course, there has been dialogue for many years about how first nations or indigenous peoples benefit or don't benefit from the taxes that are imposed upon them. The reality is that, in my case, many first nations peoples do pay tax. Very few on the Prairies benefit from the one tax that's alleviated. In Saskatchewan, we have numerous urban reserves. There are, as you mentioned, first nations that are imposing forms of tax that will directly benefit the community and individuals within the community.
I'll talk about the First Nations University of Canada, which is in its 47th year. Many people don't realize that this institution has been in existence for this long. Two of our locations are situated on urban reserves. Our Regina campus and our Saskatoon campus are on urban reserves, and our Prince Albert campus is not. We run into a situation where the employees on our Prince Albert campus are taxed, even though our work is for first nations peoples and we see ourselves as the solution to many of the issues that are experienced within our communities today, and that's education. The barriers we're experiencing are connected to the CRA and how Prince Albert is deemed taxable even though our primary campuses, two of them, are on urban reserves.