I would have to say, from the top of my head, that we do not have the capacity to compete with a major company that deals in heavy equipment. We don't have the personnel to even negotiate better deals for us. We have to do all these things ourselves because we don't have the funding or the resources. But we're learning. We stumble, get up, and go again. That's the process we've been going through.
Seeing where the development is taking place, in one way it's great for the people who need to work. I have no problem with development, as long as you make it sustainable on my land. That's where I'm coming from. The Richardson back country is the hard land of my people, and it's where we practise our treaty rights to hunt, fish, and trap. It's being overrun by four-wheelers in the summer and ski-doos in the winter. There's total disruption and no policy in place; no government to control anything like that.