On the $1.5 billion, when it came to allocating funds to the Northwest Territories, no first nation communities in the Northwest Territories except for possibly the Hay River Reserve, were eligible for any of that money, so none of it ended up in indigenous communities in the Northwest Territories.
Other self-governing nations did receive some funding as a result of that, but by the time the resources were allocated.... For example, the Carcross/Tagish First Nation received enough funding to build a third of a house a year for three years.
The funds that are being identified to address infrastructure and housing investments in indigenous communities are simply not reflective of the actual requirements. As some of the presenters were identifying, we're running into some of the same issues, in that the costs of addressing those necessary investments, because of the national housing circumstances, have increased in the last 12 months by 30% to 150%, depending on what region of the country you're in, so the gap is growing faster than the investments.
By the time they are allocated across the country, there is simply not enough for any individual community to make any meaningful—