I do have some of the details of what the specific injection this year is going to. It hasn't been fully allocated, as I'll come to in a second.
The minister made an announcement earlier in the summer. In particular, we're focusing on some of the big, expensive projects in remote communities that were always difficult to find resources for. Two big ones are Fort Severn and Pikangikum in northwestern Ontario. There's a school replacement in Kwakiutl in British Columbia and also another in—I'm not going to say that name right, but perhaps you can help me, Ms. Duncan—Tl'etinqox-t'in, British Columbia. There's a full school replacement in Lax Kw'alaams, a major renovation and an addition in the Peter Ballantyne community in Saskatchewan, and a new K-to-12 school in Shamattawa, which is a very troubled community in Manitoba. There's a $25-million expansion in St. Mary's.
Sometimes the renovations are very effective. In some provinces, to graduate from high school, you must have a credit in physical education, or you don't get your diploma. And we have schools where there's no gym, so simply adding the gym is going to help with graduation rates and so on. It isn't always a new build that will make a difference in the community.
We have held back some money in Manitoba. The chair will know these communities very well. We think we're going to have a bundled arrangement for two, three, or four communities where we would build all of the schools in one go, which obviously has some efficiencies.