Yes. I think the strategy in the NDP proposal is based mainly on what was proposed in 2007 by the FCM and CUTA as well. That was also endorsed by the Conservative government at the time. Lawrence Cannon, the minister at the time, said it was an idea to investigate.
There were five elements: capital funding, R and D, accountability, land use, and tax incentives--the federal employer-provided tax benefit exempt from taxation. And we looked in a more in-depth fashion at what it would mean. That's why we're talking about a framework, because we know that the word “strategy” is used with pretty much anything now. You have energy strategy, you have a strategy for head injuries in hockey, things like that. So you have strategies everywhere, but what we're really looking at is the framework.
The framework guides what you want to do and what you want to include with the provinces and the mechanism to include within the framework to deal with policy integration, for instance. When you look at what is done in some provinces, and the fiscal policies you have, then you can look at how the federal government could match these policies. We're already in discussion as well with the federal finance minister on that. He was open to the idea. But you also need to look at policy integration in a policy framework. How does that fit with your environmental strategy, for instance? How does that fit with your gateway strategy? How does that fit with your innovation strategy? To have it as a framework, it's not that rigid. You give clear strategic directions, objectives and goals that you define as partnerships around the table, and then it's a bit different. Then you have many components. You make sure it fits the country where it is implemented.