Mr. Chairman, because of the impact of the one-time funding that we received from the anonymous corporation, the grant from Canada drops considerably next year. They give us the full amount. I think it is roughly $350 million and then later on take out their share of it. For the current year, our total grant from Canada is estimated at $263 million. Next year, it is estimated at $282 million and on top of that, there is a $12 million federal pension subsidy. That is down a lot from our 2000-2001 grant, which was at $574 million.
Having said that, we do only get the $282 million in 2002-2003, but then some of it is clawed back later on, resulting in some of the corporate revenues clawed back, resulting in an increase in grants in later years.
In 2003-2004, if everything stayed the same, we could be looking at a federal grant of up to $800 million because of the clawbacks from the corporate taxes and the offsetting increase in the grant. So because of these one-time tax revenues, our grant jumps all over the place, from $260 million up to $800 million over the next few years.