Thanks. I appreciate the Minister’s perspective on this particular subject. I’m having a difficult time understanding what the motivating factors are. I hear his point, it didn’t go past me, which is $6 is probably, in some cases, for some people six more dollars than they have. But that said, I mean, I’m just not hearing perhaps what the Housing Corporation does to monitor and manage. I mean, if somebody had an 800 kilowatt bill one month, I mean, what would the department do? By and large would they just pay it and, of course, the person would now pay $48 that month for a power bill, or do they speak to them? I mean, the example is built around just a point of saying what do we do to encourage people to take some ownership and six cents a kilowatt is not a way to take ownership.
In Yellowknife, I mean, you’re paying .24 cents and that’s by and large not the lowest, but it’s certainly pretty close to the bottom compared to other regions. So I can’t cite examples, since the system has changed a bit, but six cents per kilowatt just doesn’t seem like a motivating factor. I mean, what does the department do when they get a very high power bill? Do they just pay it and just say, oh well? Thank you.