It would be interesting to see the information, because we have indigenous communities but they're not reserves; they're public communities. We do have two reserves, and we have settled claims and unsettled claims. We have Métis, and then we have Dene and then we have Inuvialuit.
My second question is regarding the delivery of services. In 2014, the Conservative government of the day cut a significant amount of funding to indigenous people. That included band councils and tribal councils, but it also included the Department of Indian Affairs, which was just one department at that time. I'm finding, as a person who's indigenous first of all but who has strong relationships with indigenous governments, that they never really recovered and the department never really recovered and so delivery of programs is really challenging because they don't have the resources. Even in negotiating land claims and self-governance, we have negotiators handling many, many, many files and being able to allot only a day and a half of negotiations per month per file. We have 15 claims in the Northwest Territories.
Are you finding that some of the challenges with respect to delivery are coming from the department being under-resourced? I know the finance committee made recommendations because they found in their studies that Indian Affairs wasn't resourced adequately to be able to deliver the programs to even meet some of the challenges in terms of bridging the gaps.