These museums around the country are often faced with really difficult challenges. I have to say municipal governments around the country do a pretty great job of supporting local museums. Many of them don't charge property taxes, and they promote them and support them through their municipal budgets. There are some pretty great stories to be told. That said, a lot of these museums are operating on volunteer effort. I don't think it's an unfair generalization to say a lot of young Canadians aren't engaged in celebrating and supporting history. I go to museums all across the country all the time. You meet boards of directors and volunteers who do a great job with these museums, many of whom are getting on in years. We don't have that new energy. There's a real need across the country to boost our local museums. A number of the ways we do that is to support them, to support municipal governments that are helping them, to allow them to refresh their collections, to have access to the national history museums so they can have access to collections.
As I mentioned, you can imagine being able to host items related to the 1972 Summit Series, having Paul Henderson's jersey, Phil Esposito's stick on display. There could be a sneak preview of these things at an evening reception. They could charge people $150 a ticket and get a little cash into the till. Again, it would be at no cost to the local museum. Indemnification pays for it. The local museum could get these items. It could host a fundraiser. People could come in and put a little money into the local museum. They could do another event a few months later. We need to get collections moving around the country.
It's great to have the big, beautiful, iconic national museum here in the national capital, but it shouldn't just be about the national capital. All our museums should benefit from this great institution. That's what we're trying to do.