It's a great question. I'll be very brief.
This is for the Sustainability CoLab Network, one of the four entities in the Low Carbon Partnership.
We choose our members based on four approaches they much follow. They must be local, working with businesses. The businesses must be setting targets, so not just all chatting in a room about the same old, same old. They're setting goals about what's going to change. And they must be financially self-sufficient, which gets into your second point. They all apply, and we select those that are best positioned to be successful against those criteria. That's how we can come back and say, “Here are the results: total GHG is reduced; total GHG is committed.” It's because we have those rules that we ensure that our local members, like Durham Sustain Ability, follow. Durham Sustain Ability had their program, Durham Partners in Project Green, for two years before they began to work with us. They had started to bring some people in a room...no results to report on. As a result of working with us, that's what's now changed.
To your second question, this is a core requirement. Our programs must be financially self-sufficient. It's around a $250,000 program locally to operate. That comes from a mix of business, government, and foundation support. With this investment, the Government of Canada can leverage examples like that from all four of our partners that have a locally, financially self-sufficient program in addition to provincial support. In the CoLab Network, for example, in the past year, the Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change, in their green investment fund, supported the CoLab Network with a $1-million incentive fund from cap-and-trade revenue. This is what's already in place, as I mentioned, the trust relationships that are already built up across our network, that we bring to bear to then look to scale further.