Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Chairman, we are certainly always looking for opportunities to repatriate services to the North where it is cost-effective to do so. One area that we are looking at very actively right now is the repatriation of some of the services that are provided to children in the south. We currently have about 40 children in southern placements. If we are able to implement our alternative programming initiative, we would be able to repatriate some of those services. So, we are certainly looking at that.
One of the things we have experienced though, when we repatriate services to the North, is that generally the utilization increases. So, for example, now that we have a number of specialist physicians at Stanton and in Inuvik, the utilization of those services increases once they are here. So when we talk in terms of cost savings, there is not always a savings. It is sometimes actually an increase in the service. Yes, we will be, hopefully, able to identify specifically in the business plan opportunities for repatriation, but for the foreseeable future we certainly are going to continue to be dependent on services in the south, particularly in Alberta for some of the specialist services that we, probably given our small population, will not be able to provide north of 60. Thank you.