Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I think that we're talking about two different things here. Right now, the LHOs are responsible for delivering the housing to clients, almost like a landlord. So they set the rents. The rents are not related to the income of the family or the occupants of the house. Each house has a rent that is established by the LHO. People then come to ECE, as they would in Yellowknife or any other market community, to get a subsidy so that they can afford to pay whatever rent is set by the LHOs. At ECE, it's not a question of how much the rents are; it's a question of how you fit into the structure that was there before the transfers of the subsidy program from the Housing Corporation to ECE. So at this point, there's been no change in how that is delivered.
But I guess, Mr. Speaker, some people have had to come in and verify their rent on a monthly basis and they may not have had to do that in the past. As I said to Mrs. Groenewegen, we'll make sure that we're talking to our agents across the Northwest Territories to remind them that people with consistent incomes don't have to come back and verify their income every month.