There's a whole whack of ground to cover here. Now that you guys have introduced the whole church thing, it's problematic as well--problematic in a good way.
I've got a number of museums in my riding, including the Emile Berliner Museum, which is a nifty little museum on technical or audio history that is housed in the RCA building, also in my riding, which is home of the first studio to record an audio recording in Canada, which they're also trying to preserve. Right now it's being done through a labour of love. This gentleman has a massive room of just every possible technical innovation, including things that brought tears to my eyes, like the little portable record players that you pulled the speakers off and pulled the turntable down and listened to scratchy records that sounded muffled.
One of the big things I'm hearing is that the paleontology museum has about 10,000 pieces sitting in a warehouse because they can't show them anywhere. They don't have their own space. I know you said that building new museums at this point would be problematic.
How would you see being able to take some of these smaller museums, these labours of love, and finding homes for them, or temporary homes or exhibitions, so that people could actually get to know them and maybe raise some funds through that? I'll put it out there to anybody.