Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I am going to have to spend sometime, and I hope my colleague will take this properly with him, to try to explain how the process works. I want to step back a little bit and try to answer the question this way. There is clearly a requirement by the Interim Commissioner to present to all parties a Pre-implementation Strategy to have the new Nunavut government in place for April 1, 1999.
We do not have that information right now, although we are working with the Interim Commissioner on it. That information will be provided to us at the end of March, I think that is what the working committee has indicated. It will, perhaps, clear up a lot of questions my colleague has, and understandably so, in relationship to decentralization for his communities. Whether we all like it or not, we are going to have to wait until then. I am just as anxious as my colleague from Arviat is to see that document and to see how we are going to move in an orderly way and how a new government will be put in place. Our position being a decentralized model, we support it. Therefore, the ultimate costs for the decentralized model should be reflected in the financial arrangements we make with the federal government. Thank you.