What you're seeing in this year's estimates is a portion of a package that was put together by the federal government taxpayers ultimately of up to $340 million to help the Wheat Board make the transition into the private sector. That allowed them to get back to zero. I know there are a couple of lawsuits pending about somehow the assets having been absconded with, but I'm here to tell you that it took that amount of money to get them back to zero. The assets were heavily leveraged. The building in Winnipeg and the railcars were actually leveraged more than the property was worth. Then you start to look at paying down the staff pensions that are due and how they transfer all of those types of things. There was a computer system that was worth tens of millions of dollars that had to be rationalized and rectified. So what you're seeing in this year's estimates is $30 million of that overall amount of up to $340 million. I think they'll probably top out in the $310 million range, so they won't spend it all, but we're still waiting for those final numbers.
In its first year of operation as a private trader, the Wheat Board still carried the government guarantee for up to five years. They have that five-year term in which to come to us with a plan on how they will privatize: what it will look like, whether it's a farmer cooperative or however they decide to do it, or whether some international entity or Canadian entity buys them up. In that timeframe, they signed delivery documents with most of the major grain companies, but it's really hard to enforce those and to make those work in a timely way. If you sign a deal with a grain company, it's going to move its grain first before it takes yours. It's that type of thing.
So this year they've done the unprecedented thing again, using a portion of the government guarantee but underwritten by the Wheat Board itself, to buy a portion of Mission Terminal through Thunder Bay and some of the holdings further down the St. Lawrence Seaway. That also included some portions of terminals and short-line rail. In Saskatchewan they have another deal cooking on another privately held terminal and short-line rail, which they already owned a portion of through the Mission Terminal deal. They've also begun construction of two major builds, one in Saskatchewan and one in Manitoba, and they are considering a couple of more strategic locations to start to form their own catchment area to feed into those terminals they're looking at.