Thank you. And that is going to be an ongoing discussion. So the Member's right. People want the college to be everything to everyone. You know, I go around the territory and I talk to people, and they say we need more locally trained teachers. We need more locally trained RCMP officers. We need more locally trained pick your profession. Everything from furniture movers to doctors to anything you can think of people want those people trained in the Northwest Territories. And the fact is that at some point we have to rely on schools outside of the territory to do some of that training because we can't do everything for everyone.
There is of course the review of the social work and education programs that are, you know, essentially pretty close to being something that can be discussed publicly and it can be responded to by the college and the department. And so the work to -- you know, if those come back and in different forums where to implement things like that has to happen, the work to ensure that we have -- we're offering all of the trades that the college has traditionally offered and can continue to offer, the work to ensure that the programming we're offering now is robust. So there's a lot of work to be done with, you know, what we're doing and what has been done in the past. And when we talk about, you know, new innovative programs, we're still looking some years off in the future. We want to start developing our own degree programming. But that is a lot of work. I mean, the amount of work it really is I think a lot more than people anticipate. And so we need to focus on doing what we can and not stretching ourselves too thin. And that goes for everything in government. And the longer I'm here, the more I realize that. We really need to pare down what we're doing and focus, and the same is true for the college. So I'm sorry, it's a longwinded answer. And I don't know if I answered anything. So thank you.