Thank you, Madam Chair. No. Just in regard to Mr. O'Reilly's statement earlier about short-changing our communities: my riding is the most northerly riding, with the highest cost of living. I have the capital funding gap that we do have, and we pushed the pressure on the community so much. For the busing, for instance, for Tuktoyaktuk, we don't have a bus that drives from Reindeer Point, which is 5 kilometres out of the community. Reindeer Point is a subdivision of Tuktoyaktuk. That's where Tuktoyaktuk is being built, now. We don't have any new buildings north of the graveyard in my home community of Tuktoyaktuk.
That being said, the stress on the Hamlet of Tuktoyaktuk right now to provide busing and the safety of my residents of Tuktoyaktuk, it's not there. I got another email today. We have a council meeting tomorrow. They're trying to find funding for busing. If our government is short-changing, it's just like -- again, Tuktoyaktuk for instance, our fire truck is 33 years old or 31 years old. It's obsolete. We're putting them in a position where we don't want to be putting them. Where does that come into effect, in regard to making our communities make too many tough choices in regard to trying to provide services with what little they get? Tell me now, with this $5 million that we're getting over the next four years, is it $2.5 million a year or is it $5 million for this year and another $5 million for the next three? I'll let them answer those questions. Thank you, Madam Chair.