Thank you, Mr. Chairman. One of the issues that always comes to our attention is how we make a determination or evaluation of where houses should go. Over the years we have had core housing needs surveys done in regards to different core needs in different communities. Especially one thing that we find is, where we don’t have LHOs it seems to be a real challenge. I think that with the government’s decision to allow those units that were built in the communities where we don’t have local housing authorities, I think that we should continue to have some type of community, I wouldn’t call them LHO, but you can call it some sort of a community cooperative of some sort.
I know this issue was around in regards to Fort Liard in which it was sad for myself to go in there and see the amount of money that was put into that community to deal with the Kotaneelee housing project and then I actually see houses boarded up because the windows were smashed and yet we spent a million dollars there. But yet the community was pushing for an LHO.
I know Tsiigehtchic has asked for the same thing. Again, at the end of the day when we make those determinations or evaluations, we have to keep going back to these core needs studies, looking at the core needs in those communities and where the highest needs are, and more importantly, realizing that we have a lot of aging infrastructure. We have to look at the lifecycle of those facilities. How do we follow the core needs survey, identifying those communities that have high core needs, and more importantly, requirements for housing on the basis of those studies and surveys that are done every so many years that gives us that sort of clear direction
of the status of those housing units that are in our different communities?