Originally, the people negotiating the Nunavut claim were demanding that the federal government cost-share this program with them and there was an impasse for some time. The Government of the Northwest Territories ventured into the claims negotiations and said can't remember exactly what they said, but it was to the effect that we will be the good guys. We recognize the validity and the benefits of such a program. We will cost share it with the beneficiaries of the Nunavut claim. So the federal government is no longer involved in it. This is just a program that this government agreed to cost share with the people of Nunavut through their claim. They agreed to put $3 million a year for five years, $15 million, and we would match it.
Now there is a Nunavut harvesters' assistance fund set up. There is a board of trustees and they will be taking the interest money and setting up programs and deciding how this money will be used to assist hunters and trappers in the Nunavut Territory. Because we did it for the East, we said we should also do it for the West. On a per capita basis, we calculated how much we will provide to Nunavut, we calculated it on the same basis for the West and it came to $18 million. In the West, because there are regional claims and individual communities that want to access it, there is no way to plan how much is available. This program has been available for two or three years now and it is only recently that we have started to have communities interested and willing to provide matching dollars to access this fund. That is how the two creatures are coming about. Thank you.