Yeah, thank you, Madam Speaker. Right now you basically need a law degree to figure out whether you can trade with your cousin a bag of dry meat. And the reason for this is quite complicated in that the settled groups had different clauses about when you are allowed to exchange wild meat. Generally, ENR will prosecute you if you sell any wild meat. That's a much bigger debate about market hunting. But if you're an Indigenous person in an unsettled area, arguably you have a very strong case that you can traditionally trade wild meat and that is a right you have regardless of whether it's a claim.
And so what I think ENR needs to do here is find, you know, the highest possible standard and just tell everyone that they are allowed to, you know, trade or barter wild meat for personal use. Right now, it's not the same everywhere. It's -- it depends on your neighbors and a series of tests, but we are charging people for wild meat and in different cases, and it is very confusing. This has been recommended in the food security motion and a number of times, and I think we just need to go above and beyond the land claims and give people the right to exchange some wild meat. Thank you Madam Speaker -- Madam Chair.