Absolutely. Again, we're talking about setting up a college or university in our territory. It will give more vision for our young people to look forward to, because at this point there's no university. We do have Nunavut Arctic College, which helps us out in big ways, but at the same time we want to ensure that we educate our younger people to become professionals. When I say that, we want to encourage all sorts of different types of education.
We do have young people in classrooms down here in Ottawa, and that's called Nunavut Sivuniksavut, and it's a great program. It brings out a lot of good attitudes from the students who attend it. It gives them history about our new land claims agreement and what's going to be happening within our territory for the betterment and the wellness of our communities. It's a positive step when I see more and more educated young people, but the problem is that most of them move down south to bigger centres once they're educated. Again, that proves that once you're educated, you have many options in life. That's one of the things we want to encourage in our younger people in the smaller communities.