I can give you a few examples, and they are pretty much across the country.
There was the announcement that was part of the deficit reduction action plan. A number of our properties were identified for disposal. Sometimes the land doesn't belong to the department; it technically belongs to us as long as we use it for the purpose for which it was made.
I'll use a research example. We had a research centre in Winnipeg on the campus of the university. The land is owned by the department, but as soon as we stop our operation, the land reverts back to the university. In this case, there would be no money generated.
I'll use one in Alberta, for example. We had a little research centre in Fort Vermilion. In this case, the local county or the regional government purchased that property from the department.
There's a pecking order when we are going to sell it. Usually we verify whether there are other federal departments that would have an interest in that property. Then we want to make sure whether there were any aboriginal rights. That varies quite substantially from province to province. Some provinces have treaty land entitlement, where basically the local aboriginal group can purchase, at market, the value of surplus property. Then it goes in a pecking order: the province; the municipality; and then, if nobody has an interest, it's put on the open market for purchase.
I have a case, for example, in Glenlea Field, Manitoba. We had a small farm. There was no interest by either the province or the.... So it was sold on the market, and a private producer bought the property from us.