Yes, absolutely. In fact, 25% of the salary of a journalist can make the difference, especially in a small operation, between existing or not existing.
Indigenous publications are usually very small operations. Actually, at the Winnipeg Free Press, we publish one. It's owned by an indigenous person, but we publish it through the Winnipeg Free Press. It's a one-person operation. If the Winnipeg Free Press wasn't publishing it, I don't think it would be published at all.
To give you an idea of how this helps in small operations, we have one community newspaper that literally some months loses $1,000, and some months makes $100. It's that type of thing. A subsidy that puts $10,000 a year into that newspaper would be the difference between life and death. I think a lot of indigenous newspapers would be the same way.