There's been lots of talk.
Are the territorial government people going to talk to you at all? I haven't seen your agenda and I don't know.
They've done a lot of work. It partly speaks to Julie's point that we're so thin on the ground. She's the staff person at the food bank. That's singular. For some of this research and background work we don't have the time and we don't get it done. We piggyback on national organizations and look to them for that, and unfortunately try to Yukonize it, and that's very difficult.
Although things like guaranteed annual income and such are great models, and for a whole lot of reasons we support those kinds of models for income, the market basket has a lot more appeal of being adaptable to the situation of the north. We have communities like Old Crow that are fly-in only, and they are very different from Whitehorse. The opportunity to adapt a market basket may make it a better model.
At the Anti-Poverty Coalition I can't remember when we've had specific discussions on that. The last discussion I had was with a guy who worked in the territorial government, but they worry about it in terms of social assistance.