Thank you.
It's interesting when asking questions about how to properly assess the benefit for first nations, whereas you put it, how to maximize the benefit of this one-time resource, government members find that line of questioning not relevant.
I'll go on to my second question. It has been established in the courts by your first nations, and many first nations across the country that rights in title are constitutionally protected: this is not an option. We often talk about capacity building and having enough capacity within first nations communities in order to assess the projects that are coming your way. Some of these projects are tens of thousands of pages of technical data.
If first nations are, in a sense, a legal gateway to resource development writ large, but in particular the oil sands, would it not be of benefit, if we're talking about benefits to the Canadian economy from oil, to better establish and better give capacity to the first nations communities in particular to assess the projects that are being presented so that we're able to not only do the projects better, but to allow the greatest benefit to the people who are most impacted, which are people like yourself who live in the territory in which the development is happening?