Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I will try and remember what the question is. Mr. Speaker, what I am trying to say is that if it can be shown that a study was required to address a specific issue based on...we compile very detailed statistics. For example, on cancer. We have a registry that has won a national award. It is a very good registry on the types of cancer, the age of the people, all these different things. If we see something in there that indicates that we have a serious concern in a specific community...you know, there is a lot of competition right now for the very limited resources that we as a department have.
I was not saying that the Inuvik Regional Health and Social Services Board would have to pay for something like that, but again, we would not go into a region and start undertaking a major environmental health research project without consulting with a regional board such as they have in Inuvik. So we would not necessarily be asking them to find the resources to do something like that, but we would have to have some good data, some good baseline information on which to determine the necessity for such a research project if we were going to fund it. That is just good, prudent management.