Thank you, Mr. Chairman. When it comes to dealing with electricity and hydroelectricity, there is significant training that is necessary. I will give you an example. I was working with the NWT Power Corporation in the community of Deninu Kue, the First Nations there, to do a simple slashing job, because the trees near the power line between Fort Resolution and Pine Point were a danger to the power lines. Just for that slashing job, the individuals had to get chainsaw training, how to deal with electrical wires training. At the end of the day, the cost of the project was less expensive than the training, so there are major requirements, just based on that little potential project that did not go ahead. I am still working on getting it to go ahead. Just from that little project, the employment training that was required from the NWT Power Corporation before they gave that contract was extreme, in my opinion. When you are talking hydro development, construction of hydro sites, et cetera, I imagine the training requirement...I would beg to argue that we have already been knocking on the doors of First Nations. We are already knocking on the doors of business and saying let's get hydro development.
I think it is incumbent on the department to design, at the very least, a training course so that you could use that design to go ask for money. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.