Mr. Weiler, again the answer is not simple. Land use planning is definitely part of what we're doing right now with the new governance model, where they've broken up the entire 33,000 square kilometres into nine watersheds, and the nine watersheds are responsible for their own governance. This streamlines the process of what happens when a proponent comes into the territory and says they want to harvest in this particular area. They talk to the hereditary chief; they get the recce work done; they do the consultation, the accommodation. Then the government sends the consultation package, as it were, saying that if they don't hear anything in 30 days, then it's okay and the permit is approved.
Typically, what happens is that somebody sends a terse email that says they don't agree; they just don't know what they're not agreeing to. What we've done—and I believe it would be prudent for the government to do the same sort of thing—is make sure the first nation has experts at its disposal to interpret this documentation. It's like giving me a manual on my car and saying, fix A, B, C. I open the engine and ay-ay-ay. That's exactly what they do when they open these things. We need to have an expert to provide that guidance to the first nations so they can interpret it. Often it's an easy answer; they just don't understand it.