Thank you, Mr. Chair. I don't want to say it's a difficult question but it comes with some moving parts. A land use plan has always come out of a land claim agreement; again, the Gwich'in, the Sahtu, the Tlicho, they all settled their claims first and then they went and developed land use with themselves. Of course, the federal government, and the territory, there are three signatories.
The Dehcho process, which is ongoing, decided that they wanted to try to get a land use plan simultaneously or even before their land claim agreement was in place. The land use plan is now in draft form and there are only four major items that are holding it up. It's at the main table. If they got over those four items they would have a land use plan ready to be approved by three bodies before their claim is settled.
The messaging there actually, to me, is great because it then gives a lot of certainty to all land users, in particular developers, a certainty that they know what's open for development and what is not open for development.
So the Wek'eezhii Land Use Plan is the next one. Again, that was done differently. They decided in the other claim areas -- the two claim areas -- they decided they were going to do a land use plan for the whole region, including their private lands. The Tlicho decided they were going to do a land use plan themselves just for their private lands, and now we're going into a land use plan for the Crown lands or territorial lands. So that's why it's a lot of moving parts.
Whether we can now get that into the MVRMA is what's open for discussion, or some other method that Mr. O'Reilly had mentioned. Thank you, Mr. Chair.