Thank you, Madam Speaker. We have a fixed amount of money to work with, and all of us here, as 19 MLAs, every year review a budget that will decide how much money is going to housing and education and so on. So whether that meets the needs fully is a value judgment that people will make because they may not be 100 percent happy with the service, but we are doing the best we can as 19 MLAs to provide the best service possible within the money we have.
If an aboriginal government, I'll say it again, if an aboriginal government wants money to deliver the service itself, then it should enter into self-government negotiations with us and we'd be happy to consider that kind of request.
As far as getting more money, that's why we're negotiating resource revenue sharing with the federal government. We want a share of the resources that are leaving this territory. We're not going to accept a bad deal; we're not going to make a bad deal. We want a deal that gives us more money to be able to more adequately meet the needs of the people in this territory. None of us, though, have a money tree. There's no such thing as a pile of money out there that people can just access. We're going to have to work together and continue to collaborate in our negotiations with the federal government, and we both win as aboriginal governments and as a territorial government. But again, Madam Speaker, I say if aboriginal governments want to take over housing or whatever program it may be, then let's start self-government negotiations. Thank you, Madam Speaker.