Thank you, Mr. Chairman. You know there are many contractors and many different approaches when they go to work in the communities. But I know in some of the smaller communities I worked in, you have to sit down and meet the people, talk to them, if it is moose hunting season or whaling season or whatever, you have to try and work around those things. Whether it means that men work 12 hours a day for so many days and take so many days off, or whatever. But those are the things a contractor should work out with the community.
We, as a government, are also looking at spreading our contracts out longer so we can get more training involvement in it, and we will be developing training programs and they will be in place for some pilot projects this year, I am hoping, and a lot more next year. That way we will get trained people and capital projects will be spread out over a longer period of time so that communities can benefit. But also, communities will have more control so that they can sit down and look at their priorities. In my area, for example, moose run from around a certain time and that is the time you have to take off work to go and get meat for the winter. Everyone knows that so they work around that. That is basically how things should be done.