Thank you, Mr. Chairman. The 135 to 137 units that the Member spoke of, we’re looking at August 31
st
by having all
those off our hands. A lot of them will be approved HELP clients, which wouldn’t be really a burden on the NWT Housing Corporation.
The Member is right; a lot of these units have been empty for the last few years. We’ve had to maintain the units and look after the operational costs of the units, because we’ve been putting them down so quick and we’re having trouble finding approved clients for it. We’re quite confident this year that we have 82 clients, we think, are just in the stages of being approved. We think we can get those in. I’m not sure if the 20 that we’re looking at under the gap analysis that I’ve asked the Housing Corporation to do, I’m not sure if they’re in the 82 or if… They’re in 82? So they are within the 82. So we’re thinking 82 will be given to homeowners or signed over to homeowners. Then, as I pointed out, we do plan on converting some over to public housing. Then, doing that, we may have to, as the Member said, start selling off some of our older units that we continue to pay the O and M on. We just take them down, sell them, do what we can with them, but we do need to relieve ourselves of a lot of these older units.