I have a few minutes left.
You had mentioned some of the differences: better access, free tuition, these sorts of things. My final question is on the education piece.
I particularly appreciated your talking about your personal background in a remote fly-in community and being raised by your grandfather.
For education, whether it's through the University of the Arctic or elsewhere, for those who access it, is there a problem with people going south for education and then not returning north? Is that something you see as a phenomenon, and then that in itself is perhaps a barrier to education because of families not wanting to lose children and family to the south? Is that a real dynamic? I've heard that before, and I'm wondering if there are things we can do to reduce that.