There are a number of current agreements. There are three agreements that currently exist for which the funding expires in March 2009. The federal government could certainly look to continue funding in those areas, because we believe that all three of those agreements have been successful agreements. The federal government could look at continuing funding for those agreements.
There is also a declining federal contribution to the existing social housing stock in the province. I believe, in our case, that the total funding being committed will expire in the year 2039. So it's declining every year. We believe the federal government needs to continue to invest in our existing social housing stock, never mind creating more spaces, because we need more. The federal government needs to help us maintain those we have.
And the demographics of our population are changing. A lot of the units we currently have in our existing portfolio are three-, four-, and five-bedroom units, and the needs we have today are one- and two-bedroom units. To provide funding to help transition, renovate, or refurbish those units into one- and two-bedroom units to meet the needs we have today would be something the federal government could assist with.
There is affordable housing, there is aboriginal housing, there is crisis housing, and there is existing social housing stock. All those things, we believe, the federal government can help us with by partnering with us to help alleviate the concerns we see in the province.