Sure, absolutely.
We can get you some detailed answers on this later, but the main reason is that at one point in time the infrastructure budget for Infrastructure Canada was actually found in several votes all across government. ACOA, Développement économique Canada in Quebec, and Western Economic Diversification, for example, all had pieces of that vote.
So if you wanted to know what the Government of Canada was spending on infrastructure, you had to go all over the place and add them all up. It was felt that for transparency reasons, essentially, it made more sense to show that as one vote, as one activity. So a big chunk of what we used to have in our budget was infrastructure spending.
In the peak year, there was actually $80 million showing up in our vote. This year it's $5 million, which is a legacy. More money is actually being spent now in infrastructure than in some previous years, but you won't find it in our vote. You'll find it in Infrastructure Canada's vote, so that you can see in one place the entirety of what the Government of Canada is doing.
That's the biggest single difference in what's gone on here. It's a way of showing the accountability of who is actually spending what money. In this case, it's a bunch of money being spent by Infrastructure Canada rather than by WD.