Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses here and those who are by video conference.
Chief Adam, I'm going to turn to you in a second.
We're talking about the impacts and benefits.
I will note there is some irony in Ms. Dobson's presentation—irony, or interesting fact of the $1.3 billion that is generated directly from oil sands is almost equivalent to the IISD and IMF studies about the subsidy given by the federal government to the oil sands sector. I'm surprised that they got it so accurately correct.
Mr. Adam, I'd like to read a quote from somebody I think you know. In reference to the oil sands in general, he said:
I'd like it slowed down [because] of quality of life.... I feel sometimes like we're racing to the end. [The oil] is not going anywhere.
That was from the radical environmentalist former member of Parliament, Brian Jean, of Fort McMurray.
The pace of development is a question that's often put to us in terms of how the oil sands is developing. From your people's perspective, how does the pace affect the potential impact and benefits that Fort Chipewyan people will see from oil sands development?