Mahsi, Mr. Chair. Mr. Chair, the $400,000 that’s been identified would cover a variety of, I guess, sectors or a committee to identify what’s important in the communities. I wouldn’t call this meaningless money. There’s $400,000 going to the communities. We want to spend the $400,000, the majority of it, probably 90 or 95 percent of it, in the schools, in the community, into the organizations’ hands so they can deliver a breakfast program or other nutritious program. We can’t call it meaningless, Mr. Chair.
I think it’s important to identify that we are working with the NWT Foods First Foundation as well as Health and Social Services, the Stats Bureau and ENR and other school boards as well are involved and medical and health care. So those are the organizations that are actively involved with the community, whether it be the breakfast program, the school programming or the community programming. So they’re the ones who will carry this on. So we want to give them the $400,000 because they’re the experts at the table. Mr. Chair, that was the $400,000 that’s been allocated for that. Mahsi.