They are cumulative. Alberta is still required to create 42,500 not-for-profit spaces, of which they've created about 7,000 so far. The 22,500 in the private sector was something that was held back until Alberta came forward with a cost control framework, because we wanted to ensure that any public funding that was going to for-profit providers was going to be well spent and well managed. They are public dollars at the end of the day. This is similar to New Brunswick and P.E.I., which have very robust public oversight and don't necessarily distinguish between not-for-profit and for-profit providers.
In order for Alberta to pursue that, they had to provide a similar kind of assurance to the federal government.