I should just clarify one thing. The initiative is actually broader than the office itself, so $150 million was allocated to a number of departments over five years, and actually 85% of that money is to deal with capacity issues. In essence, there has been, as the minister mentioned before, a 200% increase in the number of natural resource projects in the last few years alone, and departments were feeling the pressure in terms of being able to respond to that in terms of maintaining the high environmental standards, in terms of being efficient, in terms of how it does it. So a large part of that is really dealing with the capacity, which would be allocated where it's needed, and obviously if it's needed for mining projects in your riding, then that's where it will be allocated by departments.
The office itself will be located in Natural Resources Canada, and that is essentially $20 million over five years. That's to deal with what we're actually calling the system issue, which is, at the moment, that each regulatory department discharges its obligations in terms of regulations. CEAA does the environmental assessment, but nobody was tasked with trying to look at how this system was working together, and the office's principal task is essentially trying to make sure that there is coordination among federal departments in terms of how it discharges the obligations. Another part of what the office will be doing is actually increasing transparency so that all stakeholders, including members of the public, can have a better sense of what is required in terms of regulatory approvals--where it is in the system--so that the accountability is much stronger in terms of having an effective and efficient regulatory system.