Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Some of the subsidiaries that we have operating in our communities require less than $100,000. For instance, one particular community would take $93,000 as an operating subsidy. Others would be approved for $380,000, in fact, in excess of $700,000 and the projections are even higher as to perhaps exceed $1 million. We are working to make sure that the subsidiaries operate within acceptable guidelines and that we are not taking money from other places in order to off-set the losses that some of them incur. That the subsidiaries should operate within an approved amount each given year and that if they are not, then it is the responsibility of the Development Corporation and the board to set up a plan to address this. As I have said earlier, there are other communities and other initiatives that could be funded if we shore up our present operations and make sure that they do not become a drain on the very limited resources we have at this time.
In response to the Member's question, we do not allocate on a regional basis or on a community basis. It is a first-come, first-served basis. The different subsidiaries have been set up so there is no way that we can say that it is not fair the way in which we disburse the funds that the Development Corporation has to operate with. Thank you.