It will be important as well, because there are a number of celebrations coming up.
We had the anniversary of British Columbia joining Confederation recently, the 325th anniversary of Montreal, and the 400th anniversary of Quebec City which took place only a couple of years ago. What we find with the centennial anniversaries, such as happened recently in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, is the appearance of some very long lists of cities and towns that incorporate right after. It amounts to hundreds and hundreds of towns and cities across the country.
There isn't enough money in the world, quite frankly, to fund all the aspirations of all these cities and how they want to celebrate their centennials and their incorporations, but what we can do is to link them together with the national history museum and allow them to have access to the archives and collections of these national museums, and to tell stories and thematics that make sense to them. It could very well be that they want to do a local story on the importance of women in sport, or great scientists, or great performing arts events, and they want to have access to a national archive of items and collections that will help them build around that theme and tell a story that's important to them.
Far be it from me, as a guy from Vancouver who is Minister of Canadian Heritage in Ottawa, to tell somebody who lives in La Ronge how they ought to celebrate their centennial. Far be it from me to suggest to the City of Regina how they ought to celebrate things as they celebrate their 125th anniversary. They should decide that. However, the best way for us help them, to support how to best make that a great experience for them, is to give them the keys to the vault and allow them to have access to it and to share these things. That's what the Canadian Museum of History will do.