Mr. Speaker, first the question about the Building Canada Fund. The Building Canada Fund is capital dollars. It’s not O&M dollars. In a sense, it does help us, for example, to flow through more capital, because it’s cost-shared dollars. For example, the Kakisa River Bridge: it’s allowing us to invest in that area. The Yellowknife bypass road: cost-sharing with the City of Yellowknife and flowing through those dollars to meet theirs helps that project that wouldn’t have been on there before. There are a number of areas where it does save us some investment so that we can spread the capital out to other projects. So it does save us that way, but it’s capital dollars. It’s not O&M dollars, so it doesn’t help us to reduce our targets in that fashion.
The other questions about the percentage of targets that we’ve met.... If you look at this budget and we take the $35 million that has been met, if we can match that during the next budget cycle we go through, then we’ve met the hard dealing with our fiscal growth pattern. The rest of it we could deal with through managing the growth of departments, through forced growth and new initiatives pieces. If we don’t meet those, that means less reinvestment.