Thank you very much for the kind comments, Ms. Collins.
I do agree. If I could encourage all parties to support that motion, that would be a good, strong step in the right direction, moving forward with a $1-billion investment. I know that we could leverage that funding from the federal government. We would come to the table in British Columbia with funding, but we would also immediately go to the private sector to engage as well, to leverage. We could turn that money into more investment and could work not only with our ministries but also with our industries as well in British Columbia.
I mentioned the $100 million that B.C. has put into the watershed security fund. Prior to that, we also put $57 million into particular projects, over two budget cycles, where communities, municipalities and nations were engaged in working at the local level with their watersheds. It was incredible. This was post-COVID, so to see people working in areas where they lost employment and to see them coming back into jobs in rural and urban communities was a really positive success story. That didn't stop there.
We also put another $103 million, over two years, into agriculture. Last summer, we experienced drought in many communities. I wanted to add that we could see more drought in different communities unless we take these preventative measures. It's going to intensify the divisive reaction. We've had communities where they came together and built relationships, and they were able to talk to each other to avoid conflict. In some communities where those relationships don't exist, there was conflict. It pits user against user, and I think that is very problematic.
That, again, is perhaps beyond the Canada water agency, and that's where it's an all-of-government approach to work with provinces and territories. Those preventive measures with green infrastructure are absolutely critically important to protect wetlands, to protect riparian areas and to protect areas that will absorb that water in times of flood or drought.