Through you, Mr. Chair, I want to thank my colleague for the question.
I can tell you that, with the bilateral agreements, there are data points and datasets that we'll be seeing at the conclusion of the first year of the agreements to see where investments have gone and who has been impacted and has received services. It will be a benchmark for us to understand how those funds, specifically in the bilateral agreements, are being used.
I would like to share with my colleague from the Bloc, since he is here representing Quebec and Quebeckers, that I was pleased to join Minister Lionel Carmant in October specifically on the SUAP. As an example, it was $86.8 million in investment to province of Quebec organizations. More than 90 projects were identified in a very collaborative way. I have to say that it really is an example of what happens when jurisdictions work well together to set priorities and meet the needs on the ground with community organizations.
We do know that the funds, particularly in Quebec, are getting to the organizations that are doing that frontline work. We will always work collaboratively with every jurisdiction, whether it's through SUAP, ETF or the bilateral agreements, to make sure that we have provided federal resources to address this crisis, with the expectation that jurisdictions scale to need with the health care services they must meet for their citizens.