First of all, I just want to say it's a great question. I'm happy that you focus on that, because this is new.
For Canadians watching at home, the chair would know that the federal government, to my knowledge at least, has never been involved in health infrastructure in this country, and Mr. Garon and others would be happy to say we have responded to a request by the provinces. The provinces were saying, we're facing aging infrastructure. Can you give us a hand? We say we're happy to do our part, because we understand this is about meeting Canadians where they are. It's the same thing with groceries and rent in a sense.
Some people, when they visited these facilities, asked, can we do more to modernize, to upgrade? This is a great way for us to partner with provinces and territories and say, let's upgrade some of these facilities. It matters a lot when you're in a province like Prince Edward Island, as you said, because some of these facilities have been aging. The fiscal constraint of the province is limited sometimes. You'd be happy now.
Premier Moe will be happy that I'm referring to him, because I was with him yesterday. Premier Moe, from Saskatchewan, was in my office trying to see projects like that on the health side. This is a new fund of $5 billion that has been dedicated. There's an open invitation for premiers to come see me and look at what's on the table, with Minister Robertson, who has that as part of the infrastructure portfolio.
If there was one thing we did in the budget, based on my conversations with ministers of finance across the nation, this is one about which they say the federal government understood the pressure they were facing and responded presently. We're happy to do our part.
This is new. For every Canadian, the federal government has never been, as you would know, in health infrastructure. Considering the needs across the nation, we decided to allocate funding to support provinces in refurbishing, upgrading and renovating some of these facilities across the country.