Thank you, Madam Chair. I just want to start off with the co-investment fund and the Rapid Rehousing Program. We talk about going to FMB and finding the 25 percent, but I think we should also have a plan B, which is go to the federal government and ask that that 25 percent be waived and that the funding is 100 percent because there might be some appetite, I understand, for that. I suspect you guys have already done that or are in the process of doing that. Just so that we have some options, there, because I don't want to see that money disappear. The way we're going, it's going to lapse, and even though we've still got another six years or whatever, I'm just afraid we're not going to see it. We've got to use every angle.
The other thing, again, as well, is to try and get that $60 million over here in the Northwest Territories so we have control of it, and the department then can manage it and get it out faster and help do the reporting. To do that, we need staff. Right now, we're into this I don't know how many months, and it sounds like we don't have any staff at the Housing Corporation looking after that. It's not just one person or two people; we're talking upwards of $60 to $100 million. I expect to see three, four, five, a half dozen people there just pushing this until all that money is gone because, more than likely, there is going to be more money after that. I would just like to hear from the Minister: how is she going to make sure that we actually get that money on the ground? We have got to do something different. Either you have got to reinvent the Housing Corporation so that it's more aggressive when it comes to federal dollars, or like I said before, we just throw up the white flag and quit. I would just like to hear comments from her. Thank you.