Thank you, Mr. Chairman. One question about Aurora College housing and the obvious need in Yellowknife. The Minister has indicated that it makes more sense to talk about a purpose built facility at some point that would encompass housing as well. But in the meantime, we have a real shortage of housing. We know in Inuvik the college has been able to cooperate with the private sector and enter into some leases to get the Blueberry Patch. In Yellowknife, that's private sector housing at Northern United Place that was leased, I guess, in a block for the college. Students who are fortunate enough to get into those units pay a special college rate for those housing units in Northern United Place, but presumably they use their student financial assistance to do that and there's some subsidization over and above. Now if you have to get your own private housing in a community, you also use your student financial assistance to do that but there's no subsidization. If that is indeed the case, then really you are fortunate to get into college housing because you're in a much different situation than someone who didn't make it onto the list.
I guess I would ask in dealing with the short-term need, why wouldn't we look at landlords in the city who might be willing to enter into an arrangement with us to lease us blocks of housing somewhere in the downtown core for five years, 10 years, something like this so that we can provide college housing on a temporary basis in this form and not have to have students rely on going and finding their own private accommodations and use their student financial assistance for that. Maybe the Minister can indicate why we haven't looked at some sort of an arrangement with other landlords, or if indeed he'd be amendable to pursuing options that would allow us to meet this housing demand on a short-term basis until we had some more comprehensive, broader, larger plan in place in future years whenever we find the capital dollars for something like this.