Thank you, Mr. Chairman. We have already initiated other ways of funding units. We have expanded already the rent supp program. My officials from the Housing Corporation are already meeting with the lending institutions of Canada to explore funding there. I still feel that maybe if you look at it one way as trying to convince Ottawa that we have unique needs, and that we need sympathy. I am also looking at the obligation that the federal government does have to aboriginal people for housing, to explore that more. I may be a little naive, Mr. Lewis, but I feel that if you hammer home a point long enough and hard enough, and if you explain the everyday living in the Northwest Territories, and the things that we are going through, we are unique. There is no way that I ever tried to compare us to the south, it is like comparing apples to oranges, and I never use that in my arguments with them, because we are, a lot of people sitting around this room, are first generation off the land, and I use that argument. In the south, they do have the luxury of Stanley Park to sleep in, we do not. I will continue to pursue that, but let me assure the Member that I am not waiting and holding my breath on S.C.O.F. recommendations either. That is one avenue only, there are many other avenues open to us.
I agree with the Member that if it means we have to go out and borrow money, then that is what we will have to do.