Well, first of all, thank you, Mr. Speaker, let me apologize to Mr. Steen and to his constituents. I concur with him that there has been a great deal of confusion as it relates to who is selling the staff housing and, if I may say publicly, I am very appreciative of the president of the NWTTA who has assisted us in the process.
The staff housing, we did, if I can step back a little bit, we did make a provision to extend the deadline for staff housing to, I believe, the end of December. There was some confusion as to who or how or what should sell the houses. We have sold, my understanding is somewhere around 70 percent of the housing units, particularly the individual ones, and we are fairly confident, despite a few of the glitches that you may have heard about over the last umpteen months, we are fairly confident that most employees will take advantage of this one-time excellent opportunity to purchase a home, particularly when mortgages are at an all time low since 1955, I believe.
The process we now have in place is, we have asked those who do it best, and it appears that we have not, and that is we have asked the private sector and real estate companies to move quickly to pick up the phone, talk to the individuals on an individual basis, get an offer, sign the deal, get it sold. Thank you.