Thank you, Madam Chair. Basically, that is what I have been hearing, too, is that contractors want to work because, if they are taking loans and they are taking deferrals and that, really they are just putting themselves further in debt, and that does not help their survival. The other area is in engineering opportunities. We have a number of larger engineering firms here in the territories, but we also have in Hay River a smaller one. It was born here in the North. It was born in Hay River, and it is owned by local people, but again, there they have problems trying to compete because they might say, "Well, we don't have this or we don't have a land surveyor or we may not have a geotech person," but they do have access to those types of people.
I would like to see, I guess, somehow that we can ensure that those smaller firms as well have an opportunity to bid on the work and allow them to build some capacity to grow bigger, as well. The other problem I have, too, is that, when we talk about not having capacity here, if we are putting contracts out and if we see that maybe some of the same contractors are always getting the work, then we have to get some buy-in or we have to somehow force them to relocate here or set up an office. We cannot just allow them to pick up a contract and operate down south. There has got to be something for us here in the Northwest Territories. If they are not willing to do it, we have to look at how we are going to approach that and how we can change that. Thank you, Madam Chair.