Sure. Let me just say that, in addition to the resource sector being the largest employer of first nations, in just a little bit here, I'll be sitting down with, I think, the benchmark company that's done this right at every turn, Cameco, working with first nations communities.
MPMO has had tremendous success just in the opening of the office in Vancouver alone. We have focused on coordinating a whole-of-government approach to ensure that consultations are effective, and that they're consistent between projects and responsive to issues and, I would submit respectfully, opportunities.
We have in a number of instances just since last June, been able to address a number of key opportunities. Some would call them issues, but I think we've turned them into opportunities that first nations communities in the Lower Mainland, for example, and in the interior of B.C. have said are long-standing things that should be addressed before they could get down to the nub of some of the other potential opportunities in the energy sector. The MPMO-West office has worked as an effective clearing house to address a number of these—as I say, I'm going to stay positive and call them opportunities—but they do fit into a broader narrative of reconciliation with first nations in being consistent with any and all opportunities in the resource sector, particularly in B.C.