Certainly there is the immediate impact of it as well. The infrastructure investments are $386 million. That's real-time jobs right here, right now, for those who are going to be upgrading and helping those facilities.
We also have $65 million, which will be a legacy after the games for high-performance and local athletes. This is the thing as well that I know Minister Gosal will be glad to come and talk to you about: the 2010 Olympics, the post-2010 Olympics, the Pan Am Games, and the post-Pan Am Games and the lessons we've learned. We obviously want to make sure our athletes do incredibly well on the national and international stage and continue to perform brilliantly.
But a lot of this is lost if we don't have a trailer effect that brings kids up; what we want to do is make sure that kids participate in sport and have access to athletic facilities, institutes, organizations, and opportunities. So part of the Pan Am and Parapan Am Games and the legacy projects for that are going to be focused essentially on kids as well. Those are some of the legacy projects that are at work, and the economic benefits will express themselves really quite clearly.
The bid for the Pan Am and Parapan Am Games, as you know, is a Toronto bid, but it really is an Ontario bid, and it kicks all through southwestern Ontario. The benefits will be widespread and well received. If it's proportionately anything like what we experienced in my hometown with the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Games, I think Ontarians will be very happy with the investment and the outcome of the games.