Thank you, Mr. Chair. To the Member's point, I mean, I agree. We provide these dollars. We don't dictate what program they design. In some cases, regions have actually pooled it with other money to do bigger initiatives. We offer every region $125,000 of the $1 million. Some have better uptake than others. I can give you some breakdown of the 2015-16 Actuals.
The Akaitcho Territory Government utilized the entire $125,000. The Deh Cho Friendship Centre took $40,000. The Gwich'in Tribal Council got $144,000. The Inuvialuit Regional Corporation got $325,000. The Inuvik Community Corp got $39,000. The Sahtu Dene Council got $125,000. Somba'Ke Dene Band got $62,000. The TCSA got $125,000. That was our million dollars.
There's a lot of different groups working on on-the-land programming. I mean, Justice has done some. I think Education has funded some different aspects of on-the-land programming. It's going on at the different regions. The Government of the Northwest Territories is participating in an on-the-land collaborative to bring different stakeholders together so that we can lobby other stakeholders for money that might be able to be used for more on-the-land programming. I'd like the deputy minister to go into just a bit of detail on the on-the-land collaborative.