Thank you, Madam Chair.
I'm going to concentrate a bit on what Mr. Doherty was alluding to and where Karen was going, which is sustainability.
Looking through the lens of economic, social and environmental responsibility and attaching investments to those areas, I think was already alluded to with respect to health and safety, but in terms of being very strategic, there's also working with versus handing out.
Are you actually working with our indigenous communities to establish a strategic plan that would attach itself to recognizing, first of all, their capital, the life cycle of their capital, and then ultimate replacement of their capital? With that said, there's putting proper asset management plans in place, including the financing of those asset management plans, that would fiscally impact on their operational as well as their capital investments. It's operational in terms of financing the debt that would occur over time and then, of course, for capital the obvious is the investments that will be made according to that strategic plan.
Are you actually working with them to establish this so their investments become more sustainable, and with that, the returns on those investments lend themselves ultimately to the strategic plan that they—not we—establish?
My last question is with respect to the funding itself. Is that funding actually sustainable through future funding envelopes that then enable them to accrue over time and satisfy the ultimate objectives that are identified within the strategic plan?