Thank you for the question.
There are two basic ways. Ms. Vrooman was hinting toward this in her comments and her opening remarks.
There are two simple ways. One is getting more infrastructure under way in our country and closing that deficit. We measure it in our flow of dollars. In the multiplier effect I mentioned in my remarks, we've now committed $9.7 billion. That's $27 billion worth of projects. Now, the rest of that money is coming from other levels of government. It's coming from the private sector and indigenous communities. They're putting their skin in the game too. That's measure number one. It's more stuff getting built.
Measure number two is what outcomes that infrastructure delivers. That can be—as I mentioned, and it came up in Member O'Connell's question—new homes connected to broadband, new people able to access transit, new people able to access charging infrastructure and new people able to use low-cost electricity to get off diesel and other forms of electricity. We measure it on outcomes.
It's hectares of irrigated land in Alberta that we've been able to provide new irrigation services to and increase the productivity of crops. We call those our outcome measures. We report on them every year.
