Thank you.
Certainly in my travels, during the pre-budget consultation for sure, people were desperate to know that the SINED funding was going to be extended. It's been a five-year program, and it predates our government, but because it was a new program it didn't really get up and running for a couple of years. So, really, the impact of the SINED, which is really the only strategic investment we have for the north, has been most acutely felt in the last three years. It has been greatly appreciated. I heard that everywhere I went. They said just make sure you get that renewed because it's really the flagship of our northern strategy when it comes to economic development. There really is no vehicle except SINED. So extending that SINED for the five years and funding it well was critically important, and it's in the budget. That program is up and going. We can give you lots of examples of how it works, but it tends to involve small businesses, everything from environmental cleanup to tourist activities. Whatever the local needs are, it tries to fill those gaps.
The stand-alone agency, though, is also important I think for a couple of reasons. One is it's one of the last areas of the country that doesn't have its own economic development agency. It's important that it be there for the north, because the northern situation is very unique, as we all know. So if you're trying to pick winners and losers from Ottawa or Chilliwack or somewhere else, it's impossible to do a good job of that. We want the northern development agency to be a stand-alone agency that will be housed in the north, with people living in the north, by and large, looking after its application.
Not only will it be useful for economic development, but as we saw in the budget, other programs are often administered by these economic development agencies. For example, the packet of $1 billion that's in the budget for communities under stress is going to be administered by the economic development agencies. So we're going to be able to use the agencies to get that money and access the portion that applies to northern communities that fit the criteria. That northern development agency is going to help businesses, but it can also be used by the government to put other programs into play. We've seen that in my case with the WED frequently. They're the agency that gets input from HRSDC, along with a little from Industry Canada and a little bit from infrastructure, and they put together a package that actually makes a project successful. We need that in the north. That's why it's pretty important, and I'm delighted that this funding is in there for northerners.