 We had put up a toolkit on our website. I worked with Tony Osatek from the AFN and we created this toolkit together and the toolkit is designed to assist you to make submissions to Canada's five-year review of the Justice at Last initiative. This initiative was announced in 2008 as a plan to improve existing processes for resolving specific claims and it included legislation, the specific claims tribunal act, as well as some significant policy and procedural reform. This reform was supposed to be guided by some of the following principles, that claims should be settled through negotiation, mediation, that the process should involve clear communication and transparency, and that the process should be sped up significantly because of the large backlog of specific claims. As part of Justice at Last Canada mandated this five-year review, and First Nations input was supposed to be encouraged and invited, this hasn't happened. The five years is up, as of this October, and Canada's review is well underway, but First Nations organizations and communities have not been invited to participate. Five years into Justice at Last, we found that the principles that guided it have not been upheld. Based on what we've seen so far, the specific claims branch is likely going to grossly misrepresent the success of Justice at Last, despite the overwhelming and often public feedback provided by First Nations. So it's vital that First Nations and Aboriginal organizations make submissions to the five-year review to tell their story, and so that your voice is heard in this. A number have done so already, including the Assembly of First Nations, the Union of BC Indian Chiefs and the MacNation Tribal Council prepared a joint submission and a few communities from BC have also prepared submissions. These are all available on the USB drive that you were given at registration. In preparing our submission, we discovered it's quite a cumbersome kind of technical time-consuming process, so we created this toolkit to make it quicker and easier and encourage communities to make submissions.