Certainly. I don't have an exhaustive summary in front of me today, but perhaps off-line we can share some of the details.
Just to draw into focus the scale of what we're doing in Toronto, keep in mind that in addition to housing, enormous infrastructure investments have been made to support the water and waste-water capacity that allows us to build more homes and the transit systems that will allow people to access the opportunities that exist within the city. That's in addition to the direct support for housing.
The marquee fact that I would point you to with respect to the investments we're making in Toronto is the investment through the housing accelerator fund, which will result in the acquisition of non-profit homes and in a fundamental change in the zoning practices, with a huge focus on transit-oriented development. That is going to focus on digitizing and speeding up the permitting process to get more homes built.
This single investment is worth over $470 million just in the city of Toronto. Within the GTA, of course, there are other communities that benefit. I think about those across southern Ontario: Kitchener, Guelph, Waterloo and Richmond Hill. A number of other communities have benefited.
In addition to the housing accelerator fund, which is permanently changing the way Toronto will have homes built, we've had a series of direct investments and affordable housing projects through the affordable housing fund. We've had an extraordinary number of investments made for purpose-built rentals through the apartment construction loan program, which provides low-cost financing.
Depending on how you count the dollars and whether you ascribe financing the same way as you do grant contributions, we're in the many hundreds of millions or billion of dollars, and certainly billions if you include the housing enabling infrastructure.