Thank you, Mr. Chairman. That is good to hear, because probably some of the seniors that would be in the Level II or Level III care facility might be in other housing now and if they were able to move into such a facility it would free up the other housing so that other seniors, perhaps, could move into the housing that has been freed up. The other area that I want to find out about is the social housing policy and the flexibility that the housing authorities have which the Minister had indicated in answers to Mrs. Groenewegen a little earlier. Sometimes people are currently living in public housing in one community and they may wish to move to another community but they are not eligible for public housing in the community they want to move to for six months. Recently there was a lady who wanted to move to Yellowknife and she had about four children, four or five, and she was in public housing in another community and wanted to move to Yellowknife. She was told she would have to wait six months. She would have to move here and find some place to live while her kids are going to school, perhaps the womens' shelter or wherever. She would have to wait for six months before she was eligible for public housing.
It seems to me that if someone is living in public housing in one community they should be able to make a deal with another community and say look, this lady wants to move here and in this instance she wanted to move because of her health, much better health facilities, more doctors, all the rest of that kind of stuff. It seems to me that when you are already living in public housing you should be able to cut some kind of a deal with the other housing authority in the other community that you wish to move to. So what I am wondering is, the flexibility the Minister had indicated earlier, would that flexibility allow this type of cooperation between local housing authorities?