Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I can certainly do that. I know the socioeconomic agreement, or SEA, between this government and Diavik, for instance, is a public document, as is the one between our government and BHP Billiton Ekati Mine. I can certainly table those documents again. I can provide committee Members with those documents. I think the important point that the Member is making though is that we definitely need a policy framework for the negotiation of industrial benefits, and that is certainly something that we have to get a handle on. We have been doing some good work in this area. I think we need to continue that work because there
are a number of judgements to be made when these things are being negotiated, and we negotiate over a broad range of criteria, and a wide area. I think it is important for us to know, for instance, what the most important things are to northerners. The more and more employment we see -- and we have highest employment in the country -- at a certain point you start to talk about whether it is more important to have business opportunities flow as opposed to direct employment, and there are a number of tradeoffs, and a number of questions to be asked. But I think the most important thing to understand is that we definitely need a framework for negotiating these industrial benefits. Thank you.