 Part of the issues with the federal and the provinces, the agreements that they made between each other and the transfer of the payments in a number of areas like child and family. We haven't been party to those agreements and it's 45 million plus and if I hit the table over here we've got a number of children in care. But no understanding what that number makes, how it's rolled out and what it's actually expenditure, there's no accountability and transparency over that. That MOU hasn't been signed in five years. It's very problematic and it bypassed us, no consultation, meanwhile we have a large percentage of children in care. The same thing happens with any of the funding coming to First Nations, by the time it gets to us it's already cut in half or more. We get very little of that $9 billion myth they call and problematic to that is we really need those direct transfer of funds to the First Nations and we have the Constitution now, we have Dalgomil that could make it possible to do that. But what we're paying into is machinery of the government and if we are going to have the government-to-government process we need to have those mechanisms changed because if we're still always going to have the province or Indian Affairs dealing with our funding, the trillions of dollars that are taken off the resources from forestry and mining and energy, we barely see a fraction of that and that's what's got to change. It's that whole economic framework that Canada has built itself on. They're reporting out that oh yeah we're dealing with the First Nations through treaties and agreements and that's a false report to the credit raters because they are not dealing with us. They are not coming forward in dealing with us how we should be dealt with in government-to-government. So in Canada we feel they're reporting out falsely on how they're dealing with Aboriginal time rights and we're always at that bottom. Now we've got cutbacks, now we've got cutbacks all the way across that affect our children in our families, affects our tribal organizations, affects some of the organizations are doing that good work for a pittance of what the Canadian and provincial governments do that. So the real emphasis has got to be on changing that economic landscape because all the resources that are taken off our lands have not been consulted by us, have not had an agreement in place to do that. So we haven't sold, seeded, or surrendered any of our lands and even if there's treaties they still hold, they are the rightful property, the title holders and anybody coming in our territory they have to understand that because we have underlying title and until the governments deal with that there will be nothing much for them to deal with because they are taking our lands without our consent and we haven't rightfully assigned them to anyone. So that was a lot of the things in the courts, we've never extinguished our title. So we have to maintain that and that's a big part of what's going on and we can't keep trying to put ourselves under the province, we're not under the provincial laws and I think that's a big part of what we're all standing up here for and it can't just start with these cuts, these many slashes we get across the board because the funding is there and it's taken off from our resources. So until we get a proper mechanism in place on the funding that we get that should be coming to our rightful First Nation governments and to our people because Canada is getting wealthy off of our resources and that's where we have to start talking about how that has to change. Cooks-Chem.