Yes, certainly. It is true that the entire Muskoka area benefited from the event, but that was the objective going in. The parameters in terms and conditions that were put on the funds that were allocated, up to $50 million--not all of it was spent, but a good part of it was--were that it would be spent in the entire Muskoka area. So towns like Bracebridge and Gravenhurst, besides Huntsville itself, Parry Sound, all these towns in the entire Muskoka area had access to the fund. A committee was struck of all the mayors in all the towns in the greater Muskoka area. They met regularly and were invited to meetings regularly to set priorities and choose projects.
We made no bones about it. This was a once-in-a-lifetime chance to celebrate the Muskoka area and promote it to the world. It's a beautiful area on its own, but by putting this legacy fund together, people were able to choose projects. Every one of these projects is a public project approved by the mayor and council, selected as a priority, and then funded, admittedly, by the federal government. But we went in with our eyes open. We wanted to do this, and we wanted to do it not just for Huntsville but for all the areas, even if they weren't close by, because the entire area benefited.