I will add a couple of comments before I get to connectivity.
Education is hugely important and plays a major role, particularly in skills and employment training. There are seven community economic development organizations, CEDOs, and they are all AHRDA holders. They deliver the HRSDC programs within their regions, and that's one way--again I go back to co-management--of working together. The CEDOs, as AHRDA holders, are also delivering to communities the aboriginal economic development programs. So it becomes one window, and you can integrate between projects.
As an example, there is a mining trades skills strategy group operating within Nunavut that includes the mining companies, Government of Nunavut representatives, and the Inuit AHRDAs. Working together, they're trying to identify what the needs will be, and then they will put in place training programs to address them. From NEDCIN's point of view, that's more of what we need. It's taking the available resources and making sure we're not duplicating but are building on the institutions that are actually on the ground in Inuit Nunangat and ensuring that they can provide the best possible solutions for the people.
On connectivity, I think it varies across the four regions. I believe that Nunavut, for sure, has broadband within every community. I believe that Inuvialuit and Nunavik have it. I'm not sure about Nunatsiavut and where they stand. In all cases, the bandwidth is not sufficient to address the needs. As a result, for programs that could be quite helpful, whether it be distance education or interactive video, there is not enough bandwidth in most cases to allow those to happen. As we move forward, it will become increasingly important to address that deficit and ensure that the Inuit in the Arctic have access to the same broadband end speed that's available everywhere else in Canada.