Masi. Madam Chair, [translation] once the highway is open to the communities, I agree with what she said. There are a lot of things that come with all-weather roads. We have a lot of social issues that will come into the communities regarding drugs and alcohol, a lot of social impacts once the road is in the community. It also affects the animals, the wildlife, and their food. When an all-weather road is made, before that, we need to look at a lot of things, how the community will be impacted. We've talked about this all-weather road for a long time, and they collected and they did their own research and asked the communities. They talked about how it will impact them, whether it's negative things regarding alcohol and drugs.
Also, with the young people, it increases the social problems in the community. Right now, the Tlicho region is working on the all-weather road, and they did question the young people. I think education awareness is very important and also have certain programs in place to help the communities. Even the road to Inuvik to Tuktoyaktuk and also the same as the Sahtu region and Mackenzie Valley, we need to think about these things. Once we have all-weather roads to our communities, we need to do an education awareness way before this happens, so it's important that that happens. We need to prepare and do research before any of these come into place. It's like this. It's like advising each other and questioning each other. This is what happened. Masi, Madam Chair. [End of translation]