The funding for the first nations job fund, Chair, is not the same as the funding for the assets program, but it will be distributed, we hope in the vast majority of cases, to what we refer to as assets holders. These are the service providers—there are about 80 of them across the country—who are the direct service providers for aboriginal skills and employment training in the communities across the country.
The first nations job fund is the fund that has been set up in employment social development, which, together with the enhanced service delivery funding that has gone to Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development, works to identify the most promising communities in which current income assistance clients, young people on reserve, will instead of income assistance be receiving pre-employment supports delivered through Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development and employment training funded out of the first nations job fund.
The two really come together between the two departments, and our part of the services are provided through what we refer to as the assets network. The baseline funding for aboriginal skills development is provided through the assets network as a separate budget item.