I guess directly the answer is no, it is not; indirectly the answer is probably yes, because, for example, the school, we have a recreational maintainer course, which talks about maintaining arenas and recreational facilities and so on, and part of the knowledge and expertise and experience that as a government we would bring to bear on that, would be about trying to maximize your lifecycle costs or minimizing your lifecycle costing of operation of that building, which would mean getting your heating systems and your ventilating systems as efficient as you can to provide some extra cash and also to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.
The Member might be interested to know that the NWTAC is leading a climate change workshop coming up very shortly where communities will be participating along with government staff on talking about that subject in some depth. We don’t have that in every single course that we teach, or the community government teaches or puts on for community governments in a direct way, but I would make the suggestion that in an indirect way we are always looking for efficiencies and ways to get the most out of our limited resources that we have with communities, and that everybody is paying attention to the environment and there is lots of work going on at the communities in terms of their capital plans around mitigation and adaptation, mostly adaptation. But the answer to the Members’ question is not directly, no. Thank you.