Mr. Chair, what I can say is yes, and I think that we have some better examples to point to of where we've had really good engagement, collaboration and participation from indigenous communities. I'll cite some examples.
The other thing is that one of the opportunities that we also have to enable this participation and support for remediation projects is that we do offer capacity funding. That's part of the divestiture process. It's also part of the remediation process, and that's to allow communities to play a role in the way that they wish to participate in the process. It's done either through grant or contribution funding or through contracting funding, and they can be things like monitoring and helping with the indigenous knowledge transfer and understanding.
What I can say is that for the Victoria Harbour remediation, a complex multi-year project that we have been doing, we have been engaging with the Songhees and the Esquimalt nations and working closely with them. We've been using vehicles through Indigenous Services Canada to be able to provide that capacity funding to the nations, and this would be one project in which their contributions and their support have been invaluable, I would say, to the success of the project.
Similarly, with the Portneuf wharf demolition—