First of all, I noted with amazement yesterday that the federal government gave $122 million to help fund the new Royal Alberta Museum. It's astonishing. I heard about it on the plane coming down, because the guy sitting beside me was coming here with the Premier of Alberta, who is meeting with the Prime Minister today, and said they had made an announcement that afternoon of more than $100 million in support of a provincial museum. It's amazing and very good that it happened.
In terms of a national museum strategy, there is a great diversity of institutions. Some are provincial, some are local, some are NGOs, etc., and some have nothing to do with government. I think the emphasis of a national museum strategy should not necessarily be on the biggest ones but those on the next levels down. Places like the ROM received valuable support for our expansion from the Government of Canada. It was a breakthrough again, as the federal government normally doesn't deal with a provincial museum.
Getting over some of those jurisdictional attitudes, as you did yesterday, is a very good thing to do. I think it should be focused somewhat on the smaller museums that have intimacy and that have a relatively greater need. That's probably where you might show some bias.