Thank you for your question.
To your first point, the fund would allow communities to do major renovations or rehabilitation to any manner of sport and recreation infrastructure. First of all, municipalities are probably the owner of the largest sport and recreation asset base across this country. It ranges from trails to sporting fields, tennis facilities, seniors centres, cultural facilities, arenas and pools. The challenging part is when those facilities have major renewal requirements, quite often they can be taken out of service for a short or a longer period of time, for example, the roof or the pipes in an arena, which really can take that asset away from a small community when it's the only community hub available for all ages. The fund would allow directed funds to look after the rehabilitation and rebuild of any manner of infrastructure.
To your second point, and I think it's probably a key one, is the requirement for municipalities to have really strong asset management plans. You see that more in roads and bridges where they're inventorying and valuing the state of their infrastructure in order to calculate what the replacement costs would be in order to put into a reserve fund so that these are planned refurbishments and that municipalities are able to help fund those requirements going forward. I think you're seeing that. I think that there are municipalities that have strong asset management plans. Many facilities though were built at a similar time, for example in 1967, and are nearing the end of their useful life. These asset replacements take them out of commission for a period of time. That makes it challenging in terms of shutting down the facility in order to re-roof it, or put in a new HVAC system. I think it's a balance and I think we're working significantly within the sector to ensure that communities have strong asset management plans so they are protecting for their own future going forward.