- Engage in meaningful consultation and build relationships with all three Indigenous groups in the project area.
- Fund, promote, and work with Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities to preserve, document, and commemorate any lost or disturbed heritage sites.
- Document a clear protocol for the discovery of new cultural heritage sites through construction.
- Consider the use of other indicators of effects on cultural heritage resources, in addition to the "loss or disturbance" of sites.
- Establish women accommodations and support services outside the work place
- Establish training for high-level job opportunities
- For the new roads necessary for the project, viable safety aspects need to be addressed, as well as closing or privatization procedures.
- The trapper compensation pan should be reevaluated and made more inclusive.
- Follow up and monitoring procedures enforcing conservation and access regulations need to be drawn up prior to the completion of the project.
- Follow up regulatory bodies requiring more then one responsible agency need to be properly coordinated prior to their need.
- Establish more credible baseline data for the aquatic environment so better predictions can be made regarding impacts on the habitat, incidence of entrainment-related injury and mortality, and fish Methyl-Mercury concentrations .
- Establish a more credible baseline data for the cumulative effect assessment.
- Redo the cumulative effects assessment properly to have a better understanding of the possible impacts from all past, present and future projects.