I couldn't call every instance of an agreement with a proponent as being fully consulted by the community, for the community, although we're talking about fairly small communities; and they like to maintain their position in their own territories so that they can work out different formulas with proponents.
One of the challenges that the Grand Council and the Cree Nation Government have is to make sure these agreements are consistent with agreements in other places in the territory, not only so that they're like the others but so that they make the bar, they're within the range of what the Crees have negotiated in the past.
On the big issues, there's been a lot of effort put into people being informed. We've spent a lot of money on it. We've spent a lot of time on it as well. The results are important. We went from the La Grande project, which didn't have any real impact assessment, to the EM1A project, which is a project that includes close to $1 billion worth of dikes being put along the river to maintain the water level at the natural level while at the same time diverting some of the water toward the La Grande project.
You have to take these types of questions one at a time and make sure you understand all the variables.