To an earlier question, government is complicated, so any one initiative is not necessarily the same as another.
Generally, we're looking at a three-step process where there will be a policy discussion, a policy decision of government to say that this is something we want to do. Then there's a budget decision to say that this is how much we're going to spend on it. Then we see the TB approvals and we bring that to Parliament for approval. That's the general playbook.
What we see here in the 21 initiatives is consistent with that. There would be policy discussions at cabinet about, for instance, the LGBT Purge class action. This is a liability facing the government. We need to do something as a government to respond to this. There was a discussion about how best to formulate that response and what departments would be involved in that response. What you see here before you is that the program is being addressed by National Defence, primarily for legal costs and some of the challenges to date. The Treasury Board Secretariat is holding the money in their central vote and will be allocating that money once the class is settled by the courts.