Madam Chair, maybe very quickly I'll go through year one, because I almost have to go through it community by community, but in year one in Tulita, of the units there, there were three units taken into Tulita, two are occupied by teachers, one unit was sold. In Fort Good Hope, there's two units there. One is rented by a professional -- I'm not sure what the person does -- and one is rented by the Yamoga Land Corporation. In Fort Liard, one unit is rented by a health care provider and one unit is rented by a teacher. In Lutselk'e all the units are occupied. Two are rented under the Supported Lease Program; one is rented by a health care provider, one rented by a teacher. In Fort Resolution, all the units are occupied and one unit is rented by the Supported Lease Program, one unit has an offer to purchase on it through the Supported Lease Program, two units are rented by teachers and one unit is rented by some other professional, I don't know who. In Norman Wells the same thing, one unit is rented by a health care provider, one rented by policing services and three by other professionals. In Fort Good Hope there was one unit and it was sold to a community resident.
But has this achieved its purpose in terms of housing for professionals? Absolutely. Did it do it 100 percent? No, we never believed it would and we weren't going to leave units vacant because of the make-up of teachers or nurses in that year we didn't need the unit quite the way it was or people didn't want that big a house, there are other people in the communities who had needs too.
When we go into year two, it's the same sort of thing. By far the majority of these houses are being rented by professionals, teachers, nurses, whoever they may be, in a way that allows the community to provide their needs for professional services. Madam Chair, as we go through with these market units though, we're going to leave, as much as possible, latitude for the community leaders to decide how these units are going to be used. If they choose to put the band manager in one of them, that's okay. The band manager gets a house and pays market rent for it. While the original objective was to create market communities, the end effect is we need to have, when a teacher comes into the community, some choice for that teacher. If it's a single person, they don't want a four-bedroom house, they want a one-bedroom house and so on. So there has to be some flexibility built in as this program continues. Thank you, Madam Chair.