There are lots of examples of highly-publicized ventures that the BDIC -- and probably not so much BCC -- had engaged in in the past that raised eyebrows of people here and maybe elsewhere. A couple of years ago, they did a mass mail-out on faxes, selling Christmas gifts, severely disrupting local markets. That is one thing I can think of. I wonder why you go to Fort McPherson, or
was it Tsiigehtchic? They don't have a commercial place. They might not have as many business ventures going on there, when I think public money should be spent fostering businesses in communities where there aren't any, and then I see money being spent in lots of businesses in Yellowknife I think that might not require public funding. I am trying to see how doing this new way is going to better that sort of situation. There are numerous businesses, arts and crafts businesses or small business in communities that cannot access commercial lending. I think that there should be a lot more opportunities for them to enter into. I think this is the kind of thing that this corporation or any sort of public-funded business agency should be more actively involved in. I am not getting a picture from here that that sort of situation is really going to change. It is just that we are putting one umbrella onto an entity that used to be two. I guess there are some economies of scale to be gained. I am being asked by the Minister to say, okay, we are just putting the framework here. We are marrying these two. We are going to turn them into one. We are hoping that they are going to be more efficient, but as to how they are going to do it and how they are going to better deliver government objectives or the Minister's objectives, we are just going to have to wait and see. Is that the extent of what I am being asked to do here?