Thank you, Majid. It's great to see you virtually.
The $962 million is great news. Usually, when you look at the budget for the regional development agencies, it's $1.3 billion. We're pretty close to doubling the budget. Usually the RDAs are there in times of...for the recovery, to really help in terms of stimulus. It is the first time that we're really using them to stabilize an economic situation.
It's $962 million, which is divided into $675 million for the RDAs themselves, and the RDAs administer a fund that goes to the community futures organizations. In some places in the country they're called CFDCs. In Quebec it's called SADC. That's why Sébastien Lemire was asking me questions about that. That's $287 million.
For that part of the $287 million, it's really for rural places, rural communities that sometimes don't have access to a bank. They don't have a bank, or the next financial institution is 100 kilometres away. The SADC and the community futures organizations are there to support the local gas station, the local hair salon or the local restaurant. They provide loans for smaller amounts that are key for rural communities.
For the RDAs in general, well, what we're telling Canadians is, if they don't have access to the wage subsidy, if they don't have access to the rent relief, if they don't have access to the CEBA—the $40,000—if they don't have access to the indigenous business funding, well, they should come and see us. They should go to FedDev in southern Ontario, FedNor in northern Ontario, CED in Quebec, ACOA in Atlantic Canada, WD in western Canada or CanNor in the great north, and we can help out through loans. Basically, we'll be taking a bit more risk than the banks can take because we know that we have to help our businesses and protect, quite frankly, our main streets all across the country.