We run into this challenge of ambition versus the practical ability to implement across a whole host of different issues with the federal government.
With this piece of legislation, as a group that would potentially benefit from it, we aren't necessarily 100% sure how the funds will be found to use this, but we certainly would have the expectation that our community would be serviced alongside all the other interests. That creates a practical reality in terms of how the government is going to accommodate the different challenges of implementation.
In too many scenarios, there have been good intentions in legislation that is purposely vague, which has ultimately meant that we can't avail ourselves of the benefits of the legislation, and there isn't money to do it anyway.
That is a shared concern, and I hope that focusing on a distinctions-based way of working with indigenous peoples would give us a bit of a placehold that we haven't had before.
On the larger question about financing, I share your concern.