Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I guess just like what the Minister has stated that a lot of the communities are not all in tune with this new deal and I'm not sure if they know whether it's a good deal or a bad deal yet. I guess with the inaccuracy of the assessment rolls to date, because there is a nine-year gap between the new roll and the old roll, and the resources to manage these assessment rolls are tasks that the communities are going to require, like the assessors, the administrative staff, the tax collectors, the equipment to print the assessment rolls, the tax notices, the property notices, the appeal processes. All these things are going to be rolled out to the community governments which they say they have to take on themselves. With this additional $350,000 in operating revenues that they're expecting with these 27 communities -- which equates to about $13,000 extra per community, Mr. Speaker -- if this government could tell me how these communities are going to manage all of these tasks with the extra $13,000 that they're supposedly going to be collecting, then I think maybe it's a plan that we should implement in this government as opposed to pouring it on with the community governments and making them figure it out.
I just want to ask the Minister how the Municipal and Community Affairs department plans on assisting and providing resources to the communities so that they will be able to take on this new deal initiative. Thank you.