Contaminated sites is a government-wide program, so the Treasury Board Secretariat manages a large reserve to fund contaminated sites. They assess priorities according to criteria across all departments. In the supplementary estimates we are looking for money to continue to do that work.
We're going to be spending about $240 million over the next three years. The key projects we're going to be doing this year are Esquimalt harbour, which is a big project, at about $40 million; 5 Wing Goose Bay remediation, which is about $19 million; and then some other smaller ones.
The way the program works is we, the Department of National Defence, are responsible for our contaminated sites. We will go in and do an assessment to see exactly what contamination is there and what the best measures are to clean it up. Then Treasury Board will provide us funding to tackle the most contaminated sites first, and we work our way through that. It's a strong commitment to try to clean up a lot, but there's no question National Defence has a fair number of those sites to work on.