Thank you. The current contract is between Stanton, although it is on behalf of the government, and it covers basically the Stanton and extension, but there is a difference around how the territorial government also gets funding back should there be under FNIHB or under this particular agreement. So there are a couple of pockets of pooling. Not all things are under the reciprocal billing. Basically those are hospitals, drugs, doctors, services under kind of the original Canada Health Act.
One of the things that we are working on with both Yellowknife and the Greys with the physicians, some of it we capture because of the reciprocal billing around physicians and the mobile clinics, but not all. I have to tell you that we aren’t the first line of defence for that part of Nunavut. Actually, they are on call. They have a contract for on-call services where their nurse’s first call is actually a physician in Manitoba and one of their health authorities and then the call is made to the
physician in the Stanton emergency if, in fact, the decision has been for a medevac and for some kind of treatment. That physician may also... Because some cases fly over us and go directly to Edmonton. I haven’t given you enough. I would say we are getting most of it. We have flagged and we want to look at the whole agreement after this one, but better to get this part signed, and so you are quite right. It is a matter of just getting the final ink from Nunavut agreements there, but there is a next round for the next agreement that talks about what are the other services and, quite frankly, do they still make sense for us and where should Nunavut be planning. It is a larger discussion. Some things came out even in H1N1 planning that will now guide some of our discussions. It’s on my agenda. We are already working with the CEOs.