The amount of money that we are talking about in terms of the stimulus has nothing to do with budgets in previous years. This is all new money, to answer your last question first, to be clear.
In terms of the money and how quickly the expenditure is going out, if you recall, in my opening comments I said that about $1.5 billion of the stimulus funding is being delivered through provinces and territories. With that delivery, we are doing it under existing agreements, and provinces and territories are actually cost-matching; so we're doing 50%, they're doing 50%. So that money that the federal government is actually spending is being leveraged and doubled in terms of the money that's being spent out there and the number of projects that are getting done and put on the books.
In terms of what was approved in Ontario, because of the cost-matching and its being delivered through the provinces and territories, I really couldn't speak to the Province of Ontario's decisions in terms of a specific project or not. Under the accountability framework, they have the ability to design and then deliver those programs.
We will be auditing and we are monitoring very closely. As a province makes a commitment to a group—for example there may be a group in northern Ontario—if the province decides that the group will get the funding, they'll then submit that information to CMHC and then at that point CMHC will expend the funds and give it to the province so that they can proceed with the housing project.
In terms of actual expenditures, it's important to appreciate that housing is one of those things that take time to deliver. A 100-unit project doesn't get put up overnight. So while we will have expended our money, we will have given it to the province and the province will only get that money when they've actually made the commitment to a sponsor group. And under our accountability framework, they must start construction within three months of getting that actual commitment, for us actually paying for the commitment that they've made. Then they have, I believe, to March 2011 to actually get everything fully expended and fully out the door. And it recognizes the fact that housing.... As I say, a 100-unit project or a 50-unit project isn't going to get built overnight, but it's important to get the work going and started. So in our accountability framework we've built in, once we pay for that commitment made, the province has about three months to get the project under way and started.