It's tremendously important, tremendously important. When we started in the bid, we formed a group called Legacies Now, so if we won or if we lost the right to host the games, there would be a minimum $5 million investment back into the community. We brought that forward into the games, and Legacies Now lives on to this very day.
Legacy was a very big part of our strategy and our thinking in our initial vision. And there were lots of legacies, but the legacies go beyond bricks and mortar.
I would suggest that, as important as it is for our games and especially for the 150th anniversary, the human legacy that's left behind—that intangible legacy that you can't see—is an intangible but it is profoundly powerful. As you've seen from our games, the human spirit of Canadians was palpable, and still is when we go and speak in communities across the country, which I do quite often.
So when we're thinking about this, I think that the legacy for thinking beyond 2017 is absolutely fundamental to the success that this will be, because if we do it properly the past will inject to the future for a better Canada, and there's nothing more powerful than a human legacy.