Yes. We see positive impacts. It's a holistic viewpoint. To have a healthy culture, to have healthy health and to have happiness within your communities you need a strong socio-economic base. You need a diversified economy. You need the same options that people in urban centres have for education. You need the same quality of health care that you have in urban areas.
That's all very holistic. You still need a strong economy base. Our people are very pragmatic about it. We need to make money. It costs money to take a skidoo on the barren lands to go hunt caribou. Gas is upwards of two dollars a litre. What you see is that a lot of the people who work in the resource industry seem to keep their culture. The one thing that replaces our culture as indigenous people is poverty. That's the biggest threat to us.
It's engaging with resource developers or other players who can provide that economic support so that you can engage fulsomely in culture, in health and in happiness, if you will.