Thank you, Mr. Chair. And thank you for welcoming me to your committee.
I'm actually only going to ask one question, and then I will disappear from the table. So thank you very much.
I'm sorry I missed the presentation earlier. It is a most important report. I previously thanked the Auditor General, and I'd like to thank him again for a fantastic report. It's very succinct and basically says what needs to happen, after too many delays.
My question is for Mr. Wernick, the deputy minister of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development.
I looked at Hansard for some of the replies that were made. I'm just looking for a little bit of clarity, and I'm trying to get at all of this in one question. I hope we can get you back to our committee on aboriginal affairs and that we can pursue this in greater detail there.
Of course, you're well aware of the Supreme Court of Canada's decision on the duty to consult. To consider and accommodate means that, when there's any kind of a policy shift, it has to be founded on direct consultation with the potentially impacted first nations.
Here I noted the comments about the movement toward tripartite agreements. Some first nations are more interested in these; others don't like the thought of the provincial authorities being at the table.
My first of a two-part question is this. Have you been directly consulting with individual first nations, as opposed to the regional council or Assembly of First Nations, about how they feel about entering into tripartite agreements? And are these agreements considered to be some of the transfer of the responsibilities of the federal government to the provincial governments to deliver?
I am particularly interested in the aspect presented by the First Nations Land Management Act. As was pointed out very clearly last week by Aboriginal Affairs and the land management board, that act only applies to reserve lands; it doesn't apply to the traditional lands. In my jurisdiction, in Alberta, where most of the impact is occurring, the concerns are with the traditional lands. It's a huge gap, as there's no federal regulation of that area.
I'm sorry that this is a rather complicated question, but I am interested in this general direction, which suggests that the federal government is interested in moving to fee simple land. What are the implications of that for the duty to consult and consider, and the shift towards considering giving the provincial government some of the responsibility?