Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I am going to say the Member is consistent on this issue. I wouldn't be surprised if he came up with his own title. Instead of surplus, he would name it the addictions fund surplus or something of that nature. If you look at the authorized funding limit of $6.5 million...I will get Ms. Melhorn to give some detail as to the $6.5 million, an authorized fund limit. That doesn't mean the money is there, but it's the process that's used. For more detail, if you look at the surplus of $21.56 million at the bottom of page 3-27, and you flip back to page 3-10 under revenue summary, it shows up there. The money is put back into the government's overall fund for expenditure. From there, the Department of Health and Social Services -- I will use that as a specific example -- draws down its allocation of funds and then puts the money towards addiction programs, towards the social workers in communities, whether it's the justice end or detoxification. All of those initiatives get funded out of that general revenue. So there
is no money sitting there anymore. It all gets put in and gets spent towards the delivery of our health care program here in the Northwest Territories. Of course, we know $21 million doesn't come close to touching the amount we spend on it.
For the actual authorized fund limit, I will have Ms. Melhorn give that detail, Mr. Chairman.