Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Chairman, I have offered to the Member to travel to Calgary to see this for herself. The offer is out there. It still stands. If she wants to take it, it's there. The Member also has to realize that by 2011, the project will be completed. So you will have a lot of businesses that will be looking for additional work once the pipeline project has been concluded. Logistically, that's why we are going into communities to identify with the communities what lands have to be developed and also where they want these Novel houses put. Also, we have to deal with MACA; we have to deal with the Power Corporation; we have to deal a lot with agencies within this government to deal with such a huge project that's going to have implications throughout the whole Northwest Territories. I, for one, feel that once we get to that point and are able to do the total assessment between now and then and identify where those units will be put, how soon we can have those lands developed and how soon we can get that infrastructure in place, at that point we can see the timelines we are talking about. Under the existing scenario we put forward, we believe that we can deliver, based on the location of where these units are in the Inuvik region, the Sahtu region and the Nahendeh region, the distance between where they are going and the communities they are going into, that will be the logistical issue we have to work out. Because of the scenarios that we have thrown around the table, we figure that's doable with regards to the 400 units in the time frame the Member mentioned.
David Krutko on Item 17: Consideration In Committee Of The Whole Of Bills And Other Matters
In the Legislative Assembly on February 6th, 2006. See this statement in context.
Introduction
Item 17: Consideration In Committee Of The Whole Of Bills And Other Matters
Item 17: Consideration In Committee Of The Whole Of Bills And Other Matters
February 5th, 2006
Page 782
See context to find out what was said next.