Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Chairman, on the fire guard issue, my communities are growing into where the fire guards used to be, so there's definitely a need for it. One thing that's for sure here, Mr. Chairman, is that the fire guards... A lot of times, Mr. Chairman, when Members from smaller communities argue for programs and services to be delivered in communities, it seems that the Minister's riding gets the benefit from those arguments first. This fire guard is one area we're guaranteed that the Minister won't take first.
Which leads me to the schedule for the main street chipsealing for dust control for health purposes, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Chairman, I was the Member that really pushed this, made it a health issue, and got government to accept that the dust level in the communities is a health concern. But I see my community of Lutselk'e is not even on this list, even though it's easily accessible. It takes a barge in in the early summer and one out in the fall. We have an arena project going in there that needs crushed gravel, and they could easily do enough crushing for both projects. I don't understand why we see so many...If it's a health issue, why are we taking this long-term look at it? It's just like we're doing it because we want to, not because of a health concern. As far as I know, Mr. Chairman, the dust season is a lot longer in the south side of the lake than it is up in Tuktoyaktuk. Where's the logic in this thing here? I don't see any logic. Fort Resolution is a community at the end of a highway. Yet we're not even scheduled to start work on this until 2006. There are dust problems today. They have roads, they have a drainage system in Fort Res. You don't need to do all that. But yet way over there we're currently chipsealing on a yearly basis Highway 6, which leads into Fort Resolution. So your argument, Mr. Minister, just doesn't fly with me here. I'd like to get a response to those issues, Mr. Chairman. Thank you.