Yes.
I have another great example. We were recently in Winnipeg for the Winnipeg community economic development gathering and took a tour of the city to see some of their really neat CED projects.
One was BUILD, a program for ex-gang members. BUILD is a construction company that has a partnership with the province to retrofit the toilets and electricity in all of the social housing. They have an operating budget of about $1 million. They have a graduation rate of over 90%, with people either graduating into employment or continuing with their certification in training. As a result of the work they're doing, they will be saving the province over $80 million in the next 10 years in energy costs.
To show some scale of community enterprises, there's the example I gave of the True North Co-op. It's a smaller enterprise. Then you can look at more urban areas. I think that part of the point we're making with CED is the scalability, and the opportunity for scalability that's there with the right kinds of financial tools to support that kind of growth.