As the Minister said, the deferred maintenance deficit has come down since we started in 2007-08. The approach we’re using combines the strategic funding to address those issues through the $5 million in capital here around life safety, deferred maintenance issues. We also are focusing the overall capital plan on deferred maintenance, so the large capital projects, as the Member has indicated, are also helping us to reduce our deferred maintenance deficit. Things like the Hay River Health Centre are complete and
we will see a decrease in the deficit of deferred maintenance. As long as we can continue to maintain the new infrastructure that’s going on at the required level, then we should not see a growth in deferred maintenance on those new assets reporting in service. However, our ability to replace assets as they age has challenged the capital plan, is oversubscribed, so we will continue to have a deferred maintenance deficit, I would say, for the time being going forward, and we are confident we can continue to manage it through the strategy that we have in place today.