I want to assure the Member that at day one, if you will, at April 1st, the changeover date, all existing programs will still be offered in the region. So people who are currently served by the BCC or RWED will now be served by BDIC, but the programs will be the same. We wanted to make sure that there was a smooth transition, that people's files weren't jeopardized and that their service was continuous and effective and we thought that this was the best way to do it. But in the
future -- and I spoke to this in my opening comments -- this new legislation, this new organization can be much more flexible. There won't be so much prescribed in legislation and we believe that as communities and as regions are ready, there will now be the ability for communities to take over much of this programming and it will happen at a pace that will be different by community and by region and will only happen when regions are ready for it. I believe that as claims are settled and self-government is a reality in regions, mechanisms will evolve and our programming has to evolve with it. The existing structure was not going to be conducive to that. So I think we'll see some changes in organizations going forward. But, as I've said, it won't be the same in every organization, it will be different, depending on the region or community's abilities and desires. But you can imagine that currently as RWED will be contracted to buy the BCC to deliver programs and services in certain regions, in future that could be a community development organization. That is one of the benefits of this new legislation that is enabling in that manner. Thank you.