 Needless to say over the summer, the governments have been doing their work in terms of undermining our rights. We were sitting with the Selkotein chiefs when the decision was handed down by the B.C. Court of Appeal. And I know that Louise is going to be talking about that. And that was, on the upside, the right side of that case was upheld. But on the downside, the issue of title suffered a setback. And that's a reason for all of us to be concerned about the implications of that decision. But I think in many ways it underscores that the courts are simply one avenue to advocate for our indigenous land rights. I think we need to be mindful that we need to, in my view, become far more political than we have in the past in terms of pursuing our rights issues through the political processes. And certainly we need to elevate this issue in a more visible way at the international level. And I'm sure that there will be some discussion about that. We have yet another pipeline proposal that's been announced by the provincial government a few days ago. And needless to say there wasn't any consultation or anything along those lines. The Enbridge Pipeline proposal continues to move through the joint review panel process. But as I'm sure you're aware, the company continues to stumble through that process. And it continues to generate increased widespread opposition, as is the Kinder Morgan project, as it becomes more in the news and more evident. More recently we're feeling the effects of the omnibus bill that was passed by the Harper government. The Budget Implementation Act that affected 70 pieces of legislation that was over 400 pages, a third of which was directed towards gutting the environmental assessment processes and completely undermining habitat protection in the Fisheries Act. And evidently there are some 3,000 projects across this country, several hundred in British Columbia, that no longer require any type of an environmental review. And I'm sure in the future we're going to feel the impact of that reality. And of course the government is beginning to send out letters that speak to the cutting back of funding. A particular interest is the impact that's having on tribal councils, where tribal council funding is being slashed from a couple million dollars down to $500,000.