Mr. Chairman, signage is an ongoing issue and of interest to us, both ourselves and the department responsible for tourism. We also have an MOU with Alberta and we are working jointly with Alberta on signage to make sure we are consistent from one jurisdiction to another. I have had people tell me there are not enough Yellowknife destination signs from the Alberta side as you come into the territory. So for those kinds of suggestions for the travelling public, the national standard is one where, through the national uniform traffic control standards, they and we try to avoid as much linguistic signs as possible and have them more as symbols. They become universal signs. We would hope that people would understand that when they see the big buffalo signs, that what those means is you are possibly going to see a buffalo in that area without a long description of it.
On the other side, we want to look at our pull-offs and come up with something new that we can work with tourism on.