I think what we have been trying to examine as a government, is first of all we have recognized that over the last two years we have taken roughly about $100 million of the capital plan. That is a significant amount of dollars because we do not have the dollars and can no longer put to building public infrastructure that is desperately required for the schools, hospitals, that I am sure my colleague is leading up to, or roads. The fact of the matter is $100 million less is being spent on infrastructure. I have taken upon myself, with the support of the Cabinet and the Premier, to look at what other provincial jurisdictions are doing creatively to find ways and means to bring back the level of capital spending that we have been accustomed to over the last ten years.
You have to pay for that no matter how you do it. It has to be all within the fiscal framework of this government and meet the deficit elimination legislation this House passed, et cetera. One of the means that I have been advocating, and you have heard me speak about on a number of occasions, is, the public/private partnerships where we find a combination of both private money and public money to bring forward some of the projects that were on the plan before and no longer are. I am hopeful that, by the middle of November, we will be clear on what the policy should be. I obviously have to seek committee input to it and, of course, Cabinet approval. Once that is done then we would be analyzing what, if anything, we could do in relationship to this new policy and this new approach to some of the capital spending. Thank you.