The program started with a proposal development team made up of community partners in Yellowknife and across the north. They worked with the college. We worked by doing enhancement courses to make the programs more relevant to women. We did things on budgeting, on what you do if you need child care, and on housing for single parents. They not only learned about the trades but they also learned about how to live and survive.
The intent was that we would get them all jobs. That did not happen. But as I said previously, because they got the self-esteem piece of it, and the life-long learning, it promoted their perhaps working in other areas.
We do wish to continue the program. The part that scares me the most about this project is that the women are still going to come to the council, because this project has made our organization user-friendly. So not only do the women of the project come, their friends come and their children come. We had to get crayons. And we do other kinds of programming for those women. It's not necessarily just upgrading.
Now we really have to think about a dedicated staff person in the Northwest Territories to continue that work. What happens is that sometimes people get discouraged. Because they've not worked for maybe 25 years, it's very difficult to all of a sudden leave their kids somewhere and go to a mine for two weeks.
So it's not only the working. It's the whole wraparound program that enables them to actually stay working. I think we'll probably keep that position there so that women in the Northwest Territories can just come to us.