Thank you very much. This is very good.
Well, let me speak maybe to something as straightforward as additions to reserves, for example. Additions to reserves are preventing many communities from accessing economic development opportunities. In Manitoba, for example, the Kapyong Barracks process for those communities that want to pass their land codes and want to have the access to very valuable lands could create billions of dollars of possibilities.
One recommendation that I believe the committee could help us with is this: We need to have a first nation-led entity that leads these additions to reserves submissions so they can be heard by relevant ministers. First nations need to have capacity bolstered to replace the Indian services bureaucracy. There have to be statutory deadlines for settlement, stronger dispute resolutions to speed up the process, and different partnerships or arrangements with neighbouring provincial and municipal governments to better tackle joint planning. These are very significant issues. There could be standard agreements for the additions to reserves transition. We need first nation entities with the capacity and the funding to succeed.
These are some of the issues that I think bode very well for additions to reserves.
Now on enforcement, of course, again, we need to have a strong body of—