I have a final question. Essentially, when you look at that legislation being amended in 1906, 1927, 1956—it goes back to 1882, actually—1966, 1994, 1995, 2009, 2012, and then finally in 2014, you see that this is an act that breathes. It's not something that is simply put on the shelf, is there for life, and is not touched. There are interests that come forward.
That is what the previous government did, based on some of the special interests they heard, and it's of course what we're doing based on some of the concerns we're hearing, particularly from the indigenous folks we're dealing with on a daily basis.
That said, I have a simple question. It is appropriate, of course, that from those concerns and the public input we receive, we do come back, we do address these concerns, and that we do at times make amendments based on those concerns.