Definitely, trades skills are really important in regard to funding and for our people to become gainfully employed.
I could give an example. We had a training organization called PTP ASEP, which trained approximately 1,500 of our people. About 1,000 of them have jobs. This was in preparation for the development of an LNG pipeline that never occurred. However, they found jobs in the forest industry, the mining industry, and elsewhere.
For the community to be sustainable, our people need access to resources that go back to our communities, where we have tenures and access to developing perhaps a mine or renewable energy or what have you. That relates back to our land use planning, developing our own lands in a culturally appropriate way in regard to environmental assessment, and having projects that have been reviewed by our people related to consent—