Since we have been in government, we have taken this issue of the gas tax fund very seriously. We have made it permanent. We have doubled it. Now we are indexing it, and now it's permanent in a bill, in law. That's very, very important.
Municipalities were asking us for more flexibility on that gas tax fund. Now I can tell you that the categories available under the gas tax fund include public transit, drinking water, waste water, solid waste, green energy, local roads—including bridges on local roads—short-line rail, short-sea shipping, regional and local airports, highways, connectivity and broadband, brownfield redevelopment, disaster mitigation, tourism, sport—for sure non-professional sport—recreation, culture, and capacity building. There are a lot of new categories accepted under the building Canada plan, and municipalities are happy with that. For sure we will have to continue to support them on this program, but that's a very effective program, very well known now.
What is very important is predictability. When you're on a city council and you have in front of you a 10-year plan, you can plan how much money you will receive from the Government of Canada through the gas tax fund. It's very important to have predictability, and now they have it for 10 years. With the $6 billion of the former plan, that's $38 billion available for cities through this new building Canada plan. I know they're very happy about that for sure. If you ask mayors if they want more money, they will say yes, but they're already receiving 71% of the building Canada plan. As I've said before, we have to work with our partners in municipalities, provinces, and territories, and we will continue to do so.