I don't support a cap, because I think even leaders I've met with from my traditional territory were pushing to get it even with provincial schools. In northern Saskatchewan, you will see two schools—one on reserve, one off reserve—with totally different funding structures. But to live and work in the north, there is a higher cost of living. To even get to the same level as provincial is not going to meet that gap.
I think in Saskatchewan you've seen a lot of unique, leading-edge work around programs such as NORTEP in La Ronge that have promoted homegrown teachers within the communities. Historically, you'd get a lot of teachers coming into the northern remote communities for one to two years to get their experience and then they'd go. I think communities saw this as a way to invest in their own people, to ensure they had a base level of teachers within their home community.
On the post-secondary side, I think it's supporting institutions like Indspire, Roberta Jamieson's organization. She has a plethora of resource companies, banking companies, on board to help fill that gap in the post-secondary space.