Mr. Speaker, the messaging that we have for our own constituents and people of the Northwest Territories, the businesses, is an important one. That is, we continue to support and work to push the Mackenzie Gas Project forward in as many avenues as we can. We continue to go to the federal government to highlight the importance.
Our Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment, when he travels to the U.S., travels to Ottawa, travels to B.C. or Alberta, continues to send a message about the benefits of the Mackenzie Gas Project, because the more people -- not only in the North but in the South -- that resonate on our messaging also enforce with the federal
government that if they are to make an investment, for example, in the Aboriginal Pipeline Group, that that investment will bring a return to the federal government as well as other governments across this country. So we continue to do that.
The messaging that I will send, continue to send, to the businesses in the Northwest Territories, is there is much work still going on. I know there’s frustration out there about that, but there’s much work going on. In December the announcement on that report was a good one, and NEB making their recent announcement is even a better one. So things are starting to line up and we’re very hopeful that once December comes, things will start to pick up the pace and move along. Thank you.