Great. Thank you for that question.
I think that's part of what I was challenged with in presenting to you today. What it really boils down to, in our opinion, is about the federal framework on policy for the manufacturing sector, the federal commitment to a reconciliation with Canada's aboriginal peoples.
In a large way, the relationship between Canada and our first nations is a fiduciary role. Being able to bring our communities to a place where they are able to participate in a manufacturing sector is where I'm hoping to guide it.
The other thing I was trying to raise in connection with some of the issues and barriers that we hit on the policy front were the jurisdictional issues between fuel management in wildfire protection leading to bioenergy projects on Indian reserve land. There were cross-jurisdictional problems with power supply agreements with hydro and that kind of thing.
The policy framework and being enabled through policy are important, as well as the fiduciary role and supporting aboriginal peoples in their reconciliation and with the provinces, which, as you say, control the forest lands and the sector primarily. We're struggling to reconcile those relationships in tenure reform, or land reform. We need support at the federal level to make that happen.