I think it's brilliant. Just recently we talked about perhaps building a policy think tank up here, because there is that need to have people in the north be able to debate and discuss their own issues in a really good organized way.
This summer I was at the University of Alaska Museum of the North in Fairbanks. It is an outstanding example of what could happen as far as a museum is concerned. Of course, one of the things that frustrates Yukoners is that when people think of the north, they often think of a treeless, barren, frozen landscape, and if you know anything about the Yukon, it's a huge part of the boreal forest. In fact, we don't hit the tundra until much further north at the Old Crow district.
I think those kinds of activities will help Canadians understand how diverse the north is.