Mr. Speaker, as a corporation and as people in isolated communities, things have been transported over winter roads for the last 30 years. We depend on the winter transport over winter roads every year in all our communities that are on road access systems. We have a transportation system that serves our communities by taking goods and services into our communities, and this is no different. The whole idea of having these camps located where they are along the pipeline right-of-way is to ensure that those communities accessible to those facilities will be able to transport them. They are all going to be along the Mackenzie River system. We have a transportation system where we move goods and services up the river by barge. We'll be able to barge these facilities to those communities and set them up. We are looking at developing a study to ensure that we have the land, we have the human resources, and we have the capacity to put these things in place over three or four years. We do it every year. It's not different than what we're doing today to implement houses in isolated communities from Colville Lake to Lutselk'e to other communities today. It's no different from what we're doing today, Mr. Speaker.
David Krutko on Question 180-15(4): Novel Housing Project
In the Legislative Assembly on October 19th, 2005. See this statement in context.
Further Return To Question 180-15(4): Novel Housing Project
Question 180-15(4): Novel Housing Project
Revert To Item 6: Oral Questions
October 19th, 2005
Page 396
See context to find out what was said next.