I've been asked to address that question.
I think if this bill passes, what it does is it creates a new conversation around that. Instead of trying to fit first nations into a system that's been in place since 1897, after 22,000 licences have already been issued in southern Alberta, it takes them out of it. It creates a level playing field for a government-to-government discussion with Alberta about the use of water in a watershed, including on reserve lands. That hasn't happened in the past. They have been treated as stakeholders. If they're lucky, they've been consulted.
It will also change other things. You may be aware that the Government of Alberta is considering a new dam on the Bow River between Cochrane and Calgary. Siksika, despite a lot of efforts to have a conversation with Alberta about that, has been left on the sidelines. They are the only nation downstream from what will be the biggest addition of a reservoir on the Bow River in the last quarter-century. Why aren't they at the table and in a partnership on a project like that?