Well, some of our communities don't even have a hotel. If people are coming through, often people stay in other people's homes and, then, if people are doing field research on the land, they have remote camps. Inuit either will partner with researchers or be administrative support for researchers through guides and through helping out with people who are doing work by having base camps or providing guiding support for people.
On the bigger challenges we have, especially when we're doing work on, say, infrastructure development, if there's a big housing build in a community, a lot of those hotel rooms are gone six months out. All of our construction happens in the same window as the research. I think the capacity to house researchers in the Arctic definitely is a limiting factor when it comes to what can happen, but to answer in just one word, it's very difficult.