I'd just like to jump in here. I didn't want to leave the impression that we're not working with the provinces. When we look at community capacity development, definitely, as Mr. Rae has said, in the area of the Ring of Fire, the project that we're doing there has Ontario at the table with us. They are sitting there and they are part of our project.
Certainly, in a couple of weeks, deputies from across the federal government will be sitting down with deputies in Ontario to look at a range of issues, many of them focused on indigenous issues in northern Ontario to come up with a collaboration agenda. There's already collaboration happening, but this will help formalize it in terms of where we have some sticky points and what we want to try to work together to unlock. The Ring of Fire is part of that.
In terms of other parts of the country, again we do work with the provincial governments in trying to unlock and work on solutions. It's just that sometimes access to programming is a federal program, so skills training and development on reserve tends to be done more within the purview of the federal government than that of the provincial government. There are ASETS organizations that are run by first nations and work with communities. They are funded by the federal government. That's their porte d'entrée into skills training and development.
Provinces may come to that table, dollars may be brought to that table collectively around a project, but they have their own organizations that receive federal funding to take care of the on-reserve population. Sometimes it isn't necessarily all woven together as well as we might like, but certainly where there's opportunity, we are sitting with the provinces and collectively trying to work on solutions with communities.