The outcome of the October meeting was that the three mine training organizations of the north—the Yukon Mine Training Association, ours, and the Kivalliq—have been given a task to develop a pan-territorial strategy that will take us ten years down the road. We're not going to really hit our stride in mining until 2017, when we have 9,000 miners, and it's going to take time to train people—our aboriginal and northern workforce—to be able to take opportunity out of that.
ASEP is sunsetting. It's run its ten years under Treasury Board. They have not announced a successor project to that. So we're taking the bull by the horns and developing the strategy, giving ourselves a two-year timeline to be able to bring it forward to the Government of Canada to try to develop something that will allow the mining industry in the north to continue to benefit the rest of Canada.