Sure, I will say that we have an extraordinarily good resource in our Yukon College facility up here, which not only has a campus here in Whitehorse, but has satellite campuses in virtually every community across the Yukon. Once you get outside of Whitehorse, the demographic mix is very much towards a higher representation of first nations students. So I would say that the community has benefited disproportionately from the presence of the Yukon College.
A number of the satellite campuses of Yukon College are participating in programs today to train and prepare their students in those communities for employment in the mining sector, and also in the construction sector and other areas that would be of peripheral support to a mining, or a future oil and gas industry.
In that respect, I think we're very fortunate in having that, and part of that is because of some funding that was received from the federal government—which I believe totalled somewhere in the region of $5 million to set up facilities for training, specifically for the mining industry. That's a tremendous asset for the territory as a whole, and of tremendous benefit in terms of opportunities for employment for the mining sector.
So I can see that extrapolating to address the oil and gas industry.