I probably could get you more precise numbers. The investments have been significant, and to be fair they go back to about the 2003 budget. The current government made further investments in the 2006 budget, and it renewed some again I think in 2009. We also benefited from further resources that were available in the stimulus package, Canada's economic action plan, so between us and Health Canada, we're running at about $400 million a year. It would be well north of $2 billion in the last six or seven years. I'd be happy to provide a financial table on that.
The government's view was that was part of it, but if you don't train the operators and have the regular oversight and governance, some of that investment won't deliver the results you want. So there has been a parallel investment in monitoring, testing, training, all of those sorts of things, and the last year has seen a lot of clarity around the state of infrastructure. The department commissioned a very thorough engineering assessment of every single facility on every single reserve. That was released in July. It's on the Internet for everybody to see. It's not an entirely pretty picture, but it tells you exactly where we can start and where we can make investments that will have the biggest return.