 Well this is a great opportunity for us to get input into the post-secondary education framework that we've been working on with our Aboriginal educators and trading partners. We started this over a year ago and this is kind of the culmination. This is a forum where we're actually receiving some input from from other Aboriginal stakeholders. So we've got students here, we've got educators here, we've got members from Finesc and Ayala and the federal provincial government. So it's a great opportunity for us to finalize our policy framework. I'm encouraged that they are looking for ways to really bring together the public and the Aboriginal post-secondary institutions for programming that is community relevant, that is community-based, that is really that comes from the heart of our communities. Aboriginal workforce is huge. It's the largest growing population of all the populations in Canada and it's important to know that these kind of conversations have been going on for generation after generation after generation. So my hope is that we will actually see implementation of some of the dialogues that has been ongoing for many many years and hopefully see that implementation come to fruition here in BC. It's very exciting. I think this is something that hasn't been truly realized that with the development of universities and the development of communities coming together for the benefit of the students, I think there's a tremendous motivation to really make a difference in how universities can serve the Aboriginal students and their communities and that wind of opportunity is helped by the economic opportunities that are coming. Today it's interesting to hear all the dialogue about education and the importance of it and I can't agree more. I mean if our First Nations are to advance themselves in this world we find ourselves it's going to be based on the education that our people are going to be able to attain. About finding a place within the institution and just empowering yourself, finding your identity and hopefully you know it you can empower your people and you know we have a place in Canada like everyone and it's just you know the university is a great place to you know learn how to do that and you know it certainly helped me as an individual and hopefully it can help our communities at a collective level. I think that what's being discussed here today in terms of the new the vision that the province and all of the partners have come up with is wonderful. It's the very first time in all of the years it's over 30 years now I've been involved in education. It's the very first time that I've seen a document that has actually strategies to move forward and to empower Aboriginal students and communities. When we empower Aboriginal students and communities we empower all BC all Canada.