First of all, I want to speak to the fact that a lot of the infrastructure does need to be integrated. In order to be able to build out telecommunications, you need energy. In order to have energy, you need transportation. Often the communities, the mines and the defence sector are all wanting the same thing.
With respect to your question, indigenous communities more and more want more than consultation. They are now looking at wanting to have equity ownership in these major projects so that we benefit beyond just training or jobs. Take the fibre optic project. SednaLink is Inuit-owned and Inuit-led, and has the backing of Inuit organizations and development corporations. No other company or entity can really achieve that.
Nasittuq is that NORAD modernization vehicle that can help in directing where these investments need to go, but it needs to be more than defence. It needs, as Jessica said, a really fulsome infrastructure investment strategy that pulls in the private sector, from the mines to the investors, the northern and federal governments, and of course our indigenous communities and peoples, who want to be part of that.