Thank you, Madam Chair. Madam Chair, this is exactly as the Member is saying, people are not aware as to what is available to them. They take chances squatting, and that is the case right now because they don't want to tell us, or the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs if it is federal Crown land because they don't know the rules. So one of the initiatives that we are taking now so that the people understand, is that we are going to do a campaign between the territorial government and the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs to let the public know particularly in this corridor of the Ingraham Trail as to what is available and what is not available for recreational use. A lot of times people don't understand what recreational use means, and that is the problem.
Even with the current people who have recreational use leases, some of them ended up permanent residents, and the initial leases that were given out weren't meant for that, it was meant for a more recreational-type use. You go there weekends, or during the summertime, these types of things. The governments haven't been monitoring their leases effectively, and nowadays we are getting more people that are permanently living on recreational leases. That is a problem, but we are trying to rectify that now by the three-way communication between ourselves, Akaitcho Territory and the Ministry of Aboriginal Affairs, and even with the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs. Thank you.