Thank you, Mr. Chair. I just wanted to touch briefly on the drought conditions and some of the folks that are looking at what we’re facing over the winter here and some predictions. We, of course, have our snow monitoring stations in the Northwest Territories. We also work with NTPC, work with Environment Canada, and those surveys, the big survey anyway of that data, the collection of that data is in late March. However, we’re monitoring the snow conditions, of course, at some of the airports in the Northwest Territories and I’ve got to say at this point, at the initial glance at that information, that we’re looking at snowfall at this point equivalent to the total snowfall we received last year. So we’re a little ahead, but still we’re in drought condition and we need a lot of snow from here on in to have an impact on the drought conditions.
Regarding emergency firefighter training, the commitment is there to start early this year training emergency firefighters. We did a lot of training last summer. I mentioned yesterday we were close to training 600 firefighters over and above our crews. So we do and have always had a database on emergency firefighters, certified firefighters and we do use that database. We did use it again last year. So, again, we’ve built it up considerably after last year. However, we are going to continue training this year and we are committed to starting the training early. Thank you