Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you for being here, and I appreciate your being here in person. I know Chief Fox had to leave, but I appreciate his making a statement.
One of the things that affects Chief Fox more than some of you is the international piece. I know we've talked about that before, like when the Milk River had a bust here. That sort of disrupted the Milk River, but that infrastructure is on the U.S. side. That's another challenge we have in the sense that you have an amendment here that you want to make about quantity. We have an international agreement with regard to water and water rights with the U.S.—the amount we get. However, the infrastructure is the other issue of that being maintained, and that affects Kainai more than anybody else. That's something we have to pay attention to when we work on this in the sense of quantity.
The other part that's been mentioned is climate change, and having listened to many different people on climate change, we've heard them say that we will have more quantities at different times. Storage becomes the issue. When I talk about storage, in the sense of water for quantity, Chief Crowfoot, you're very familiar with storage—part of your nation. How do we address that if we get less periodic rain, but it's much more extensive?
Storage becomes an issue, and that leads into your amendment that you'd like to do with quantity. I know you didn't get a chance to talk about it, so would you like to talk about your amendment to do with quantity?