Thank you, Madam Chair. My question is with regard to the development impact zone, the $40,000. As of today, we're doing away with regional councils, we're doing away with regional directors, we're trying to be fair to everyone; but in this area, we're talking about one particular area where there still is a development impact zone group. As it sits fight now, there are other regions within the Territories --especially in the Fort Liard area, there's potential for mining development in the North Slave; there is also potential for oil and gas development in the Beaufort Sea, and also the Gwich'in settlement area -- to be fair to all the other groups, it seems like they're only allocating $40,000 to one particular interest group. Are there other resources for other groups to be able to acquire these resources, or is this limited to just one region which there have been development impact zone groups in the past? Over time, they have served their purpose and have moved on. You now have land claim organizations -- such as, in my region, the Inuvialuit, the Gwich'in Tribal Council; in the Sahtu you have land administration bodies such as the Fort Norman Ernie MacDonald Land Corporation, the Deline Land Corporation -- so there are institutions established where the oil companies have to go to get their information. But allowing a separate institute to basically act on its own without really taking in the interests of the landowners,
especially with regard to aboriginal claimant groups, there has to be a change of emphasis by this government that we no longer have special interest groups. If you're going to do something, do it for everybody, but don't just do it for one particular area.