Sure.
My colleague mentioned in her remarks that the knowledge infrastructure program funded 52 projects in communities with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants. Seven of those communities were actually in places with fewer than 1,000 inhabitants. This program funded infrastructure improvements at colleges and universities across Canada, and I could give you a flavour of some of the projects in the remote communities.
At the University College of the North in Manitoba, there was one project funded, but it actually supported infrastructure enhancements in 11 regional centres throughout northern Manitoba. At Aurora College in the Northwest Territories, there were three projects funded that built new community learning centres in three local communities. At Nunavut Arctic College there was a cyber infrastructure project that helped link up their community learning centres with their campuses and the research facilities in Nunavut. Also, at Yukon College there was a two-storey building constructed to house classrooms, computer labs, and mobile science labs.
So those are the sorts of projects funded through the knowledge infrastructure program that helped build the capacity to train students for knowledge jobs in the future.