In any of the partnership projects under ASEP that I mentioned, the local training providers like Yukon College would be key players in delivering the training. We don't want to develop a training capacity from scratch when there's a training provider on the spot. They are a key player with the Yukon Mine Training Association in the ASEP-supported project I mentioned, which has some pretty significant numbers around it, aiming to train 500 aboriginal Canadians. That is key.
Another program I haven't spoken of, though, which actually brings in a lot of training providers too, is our literacy and essential skills program. One of the priorities of that program, which invests over $40 million a year, is aboriginal essential skills, which speaks to a question from your colleague just moments ago. What we're doing through this program is really trying to target some of that investment in aboriginal-specific projects, where they look at innovative ways of bringing together the training providers to get the kind of innovation needed on the ground. So we are not taking typical classroom approaches that haven't demonstrated success, but are looking at new ways that are more culturally sensitive, and maybe more geared towards blurring that distinction between the workplace and the school, including distance delivery and different kinds of innovations like that, so they can take root. Then we try to have those replicated across the country where we see the successes.
So those are a couple of the ways we're working with training providers.