There are many sunset programs, so I can't generalize completely on it. They fall into different categories. Some programs are experimental in nature, and were deliberately designed to not be part of the base budget of a department, because we wanted to assess the success or failure of that program within a discrete period of time, let's say five years. That's why you have the rolling funding and the five-year's assessment of success or failure. If it's failure, you fix the program, or it may be there is no need for that program. It was time-limited in terms of what it was needed for. If the program is successful, the funding could be repeated for another five-year period or whatever is deemed appropriate. It really depends on a case-by-case basis.
Of course, that provides a review process, which is carried out by Treasury Board, and then Treasury Board recommends to Finance, on our review of a program that is in the final year of its funding, whether it is meeting its objectives and whether it should be continued. Quite frankly, many of them are continued because they are achieving goals that are important to Canadians and to society, and that will be ultimately reflected in the budget.