First, just to clarify the record, the $3.25 billion I referred to is a combination of investments in water and waste water. The waste water component alone is $1.75 billion, which has been either spent or committed, carrying through, as I recall, to 2014.
We begin, however, with regulations, and I would point out that waste water infrastructure, which by definition involves a decision on the part of the municipality to build such a system, is fully eligible for funding, whether you're talking about the green infrastructure fund, the gas tax fund, stimulus funds, or, formerly, the Building Canada fund. Waste water was an eligible expenditure under all those programs. And that's why you see that $1.75 billion has been allocated. That is only the federal government's share, so you could make the assumption that it should be multiplied by three, because you need the provincial share and the municipality's share, in most cases.
That reflects the immediate investments being made. The waste water regulations--they have been published previously in draft--talk about a multi-year effort. We've taken all 4,000 waste water facilities in the country, and they've been prioritized into high risk, medium risk--