I don't know if I'm going to say anything more than what you just said, but maybe I can provide a little bit of colour. Every year I speak at the aboriginal trust and endowment conference. I think I'm getting the right name on that, and I hope I am. This is essentially a group of council members across the country who go and they look and they discuss different investment opportunities and ways in which they can invest the moneys they have and they're sitting on, and they can't find impact investments. What I mean when I say “impact investments” is that they can't find investments that are generating impact in their own communities. They have to invest in markets. They have to put their money offshore. Wouldn't it be amazing if we could provide an opportunity for them to invest in themselves?
Another piece of this, and you mentioned it, is the resource companies. Increasingly they're coming to us and they're frustrated. They have these outcome benefit agreements and they would love the opportunity to develop new ways in which they can channel their capital to provide economic and social benefits to those communities, which aren't just seen as cutting a cheque but that are actually utilizing the resources they have in a very positive way.
So we have these stakeholders that are so motivated to do this. We need to find a way to make it happen.