Thank you to the member for that question.
Looking at the examples in the Northwest Territories, one of the things that comes to mind is that what's been negotiated in the agreements up there is resource royalty sharing. The government shares revenues from resources with the indigenous governments in the regions, and that's been a really successful way to generate revenue for indigenous governments that are emerging—some of them with settled treaties and some, like ours, that have not yet finalized their treaties.
It's a really good example, albeit a bit of a small one, of economic reconciliation in action. There's no issue of title to the land, because it may even be something as broad as a generalized interest in the resource royalties, so while a negotiating party may have its own lands to deal with, it also has the possibility of generating revenues from the resources that are being developed up and down the Mackenzie Valley. Whether you're in the Mackenzie Delta, halfway down the Mackenzie River or, like us, in the very southern part of the NWT, there's an opportunity to benefit from mineral resource development, and everybody shares in that.