Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I agree with what the Member is saying, that we have to develop the programs so they meet the people's needs. A lot of them are in catch-22 situations right now. If you go out and work, you do not get a house. If you work for the government and live in government housing, you do not get a house -- your own home. So a lot of these things should be addressed through the new housing strategy of this government on staff housing, making those houses, possibly, available for people to buy so it is their own home, and developing new programs.
We also have to think that a lot of our people are young.
They have young families. We have to design with more imagination, so that people can get a HAP house, for example. It can be a two-bedroom HAP house but it is designed in such a way that the electrical and heating systems allow an add-on to it 10 years down the road or five years down the road, so when their family expands you do not have to give them a new house. Those are the things we are looking at doing.
There is also the land situation. I know in Inuvik it is fairly costly. I guess the community put in a utilidor or something and now people have to buy land there, so the corporation will not be looking at the cost of the land. As well, I understand there were some lots, back in some type of program, paid for in the past.