Mr. Speaker, yes, there is a considerable amount of work yet that has to take place on the Bear hydro project. As I mentioned, we still have the pre-engineering, pre-environmental work to be done yet. That's the $400,000 I talked about. We still have to do more detailed environmental baseline studies, assuming that we move to the feasibility stage. There's more engineering work; there are traditional knowledge studies; and, of course, money for community information. So there's a fair bit of work to be done yet.
The Protected Areas Strategy is another one that we're certainly supportive of moving ahead quickly on, and we encourage the federal government to come up with its share of funding soon so we can move this forward. While there is minimal environmental impact in that we're not flooding areas as the Great Bear Lake serves as a reservoir, there is going to be some impact and we want to ensure that we're not doing anything that would be counter to the Protected Areas Strategy. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.