Thank you for the question.
I believe that Canada needs to recognize, again, the inherent and treaty rights of first nations and to take the lead in bringing together the orders of government, both provincial and federal.
It's really about aligning laws and recognizing first nations laws so that water is protected at its source and so that our inherent rights holders are also on equal footing at those different tables.
Irving spoke about the watershed, those kinds of territorial areas, and I believe that an exercise does need to happen. I can't speak for any treaty nations on my own. I believe that we have to take the time to build that, but I do believe it is possible, and this really is a first step.
We can argue all day long about who did what and who didn't do what. I believe, again—and I'm going to say this again because I was a bit saddened that we're trying to make this into a partisan issue— that first nations absolutely have a right to clean, safe drinking water. Our children, our babies, our elders, everybody. We have been without that for far too long, and that's because of the colonialism.
Again, Canada does have an opportunity to recognize those and to bring the legal order or the government partners together to have those discussions in proper spaces.