Mr. Chair, with the capital planning process, our department does identify the requirements as we see fit, based on the building’s age and based on consultation that we receive annually from our building users. When we are identifying them across the 20-year span, the thing that it always comes back to is the ranking of the projects, whether it’s (a) protection of people, (b) protection of assets, (c) the environment, (d) financial investment and, finally, (e) program requirements. Unfortunately, when we came to the table with the capital planning, our projects didn’t come to the top. As the Minister spoke earlier, definitely we have had some great success in the past five years and 10 years.
The one thing I would like to point out is with the planning study, you will not see the approval or the funding for the future years. So if you have a planning study funded for ’14-15, you won’t see the funding in ’15-16, ’16-17, to carry the project through, because once you finish that planning study, you then have to go back through the capital planning review and then you would see it secured in the plan, just for clarification. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.