Thank you very much.
I must say it's been very interesting today to hear all of the presentations and answers. I think they've been great; I think they've been beneficial to this committee.
I always try, if I have time at the end, to give a couple of my comments as chair.
I think it was back in 2004 or 2003 in a meeting not about museums, but about copyright, when I said at this committee table that copyright was very confusing to me and that I wished we got onto things that I had come to the committee for, such as small museums. I was told at that time that it was one of the first times museums had been mentioned for quite some time in the committee.
I am very, very interested in heritage and museums. I've been fighting very hard for three or four years for the Dr. Frederick Banting homestead, which right now is in the hands of the Ontario heritage organization, but which I feel has been neglected.
When you're talking about new museums coming up, I live not too far away from a town in Ontario called Lucan, and there've been a lot of books written about the Donnellys of Lucan. It's terrifying how the Donnelly tradition has lived on around that area. But they do have something they've been working hard on, having fundraised almost $100,000 for their museum, which would help stimulate the economy of that small town, because there are a lot of people who are very interested in the heritage of that area. So there are things like that.
Something else that was mentioned besides museums was libraries and archives, and I think there's a knitting together of all three of those entities. I know that archives have had some real problems and that archives are really a museum—