Thank you Mr. Chairman I will respond because it seems to be referring more to social programs and how he would see that working I guess and problems in that area. I guess my answer would be that first of all, we would have to make sure that when we negotiated the transfer that adequate financial resources went to the community that should allow them to provide whatever sphere of services that they are going to be delivering. We would have to make sure that we provide enough funding to last for the whole year.
If there were problems because of things outside of the control of the municipality or the group that is designated to take on delivery of those programs, I can use for example, because it is in our communities we have these outbreaks of RSV almost on an annual basis in the Nunavut area in particular because of our longer winters. If, for example, a community had the health care programs in their community and they had an outbreak of RSV, I mean that would be an exceptional circumstance where we would have a pool of contingency funds somewhere, whether it be at the regional level or the territorial level, to deal with those types of extraordinary circumstances that would come about during the course of a year throughout the Territories, no matter what community it would be. I guess that, in trying to answer the Member's question on funding difficulties where they ran out of money because of extraordinary circumstances, that is the way that I would envision it working Mr. Chairman. Thank you.