Thank you very much, Madam Chair. The beauty of the internet is I've now got the annual report in front of me here. And the annual report doesn't tell us what houses in what communities are going to be retrofitted by Housing NWT. It doesn't tell us what communities are going to see new houses. And what I'm thinking of here is that if there are community governments or Indigenous governments that want to get involved in housing and don't have kind of the ability to see where Housing NWT is going, it's hard for them to work in partnership with Housing NWT and to really support that work and to work together. And I know that some Indigenous governments are getting more involved in housing delivery across the territory, and I know that there are intimate conversations happening between Housing NWT and these organizations, but we also know that there are grassroots organizations that want to be involved as well, and they won't have those same -- the same ability to sit at those tables either. And so in order to have everybody, including NGOs, available to really work on this together, it requires a little bit of foresight into what that capital plan will be.
But I want to go on to my next question, and what I want to understand more is when I look at the statistics of housing in NWT communities and the last kind of overall snapshot we had was in 2019 of -- done by -- sorry, Statistics NWT, and what that showed was that Colville Lake had the highest percentage of dwellings with housing issues in the Northwest Territories, and it showed that Colville Lake had 90 percent of its dwellings had housing issues. And what I see when I look at this list is that one unit is earmarked for Colville Lake. And so I'm wondering if the Minister can explain how Housing NWT decides what communities it works on projects in. Thank you.