Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I will respond in a general way and then I will have Mr. Vician. I think the best way to look at it is, when we had a downturn in the economy and two of the three diamond mines shut down for extended periods, the people that were laid off were mainly southern workers that didn’t live in the Northwest Territories. So the mines went to special effort to keep Aboriginal and northern employees on and they did that until the economy recovered and I think things may have changed when the mines moved from open pit to underground mining where the skill sets required a change. That could have impacted.
I would like to reassure the Member that there is human rights legislation that was passed by this Assembly to protect against any possibilities of discrimination and I would like to ask, through you, Mr. Chairman, for Mr. Vician then to explain how we monitor the reporting through the socio-economic agreements. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.