Okay, that's two questions.
I don't think government can do anything in terms of elected versus hereditary. Every community is going to have to figure that out for itself, because every community has evolved to a certain extent in terms of their leadership. Some have gone entirely towards elected leadership. Some have stayed with their hereditary. Some have actually created some sort of parallel co-operative process for that.
Even aboriginal people don't understand the difference between elected leadership versus hereditary. I've been to communities where members were questioning me on what I was doing. They didn't even understand the fundamentals of the Indian Act. They didn't understand that band councils just did not have authority to spend money that came from Ottawa. This speaks to the ignorance and apathy that band members have.
In amongst this confusion there's always an opposition group that will not support council no matter what. It doesn't matter what you do. You could have signed the best agreement in the world, they are still going to oppose it. I will give you an example. In the last LNG vote I had in my community, after very many votes our last LNG agreement came in at 92%, the highest rate we ever had....
By the way, if you want to see how out of control this can get, I suggest you find a court case that came out six or seven years ago called Wilson v. Switlo. That was my band. It tore our community apart. When you read the evidence in that you will not believe some of the things that happened and some of the things that were stated in my community. One of them was a letter saying that this person from the United States was actually mandated to bring 200 Gurkha soldiers into my little village to keep the peace. This is what we were trying to deal with. We can see this spreading across B.C. if not Canada because these foreign influence people come, they find the division point and they build on that. They have no interest in the community or the members themselves. I don't think government really has a part to play in it.
By the way, before I get to your second part, in terms of capital, I think there's a way for the federal and provincial governments to get involved with capital, not directly with money but actually think about an accommodation of the rights and title and say we can accommodate your capital needs through a loan guarantee as long as we know that the risk is so low that neither party is going to lose out. The business plan is there. In my accommodation to the first nations people as a fiduciary as well as the Crown, I'll give up a loan guarantee. That can solve a lot of problems with investors who are worried about investing with first nations.
I forget the second part of your question.