Quickly, I think what you'll see is the Government of Canada representing the government and the people of Canada, as they have in the past. It will be with the kinds of consultations and discussions you've had. There will be times when there's lots of time for discussion and times when it's basically a heads-up because you'll have emergency issues and things of that sort.
One of the things to also keep in mind when you think of self-government and self-determination is that this is a very, very long process. Indigenous communities are very small. They do not have a lot of skilled people, because a community of 5,000 people has a limited number of skilled people regardless of what ethnic background they are. What you're finding as you go across the north is that communities are taking up different kinds of responsibilities at different paces, and often focusing on health care and economic development and education first and other things coming down the line.
Quite frankly, and perhaps Mr. Reimer can say if he agrees with me or not, I think an awful lot of this has to do with the question of knowing they are respected, knowing the Inuit voice is heard, knowing there's a desire to listen, not for politeness reasons but because there's something to be learned from Inuit people. I don't think we're there yet. I don't think we've actually proven to the Inuit population that we listen to them ahead of time. That's not a legal issue, it's not a constitutional issue; it's a sort of small āpā political process.