At the present moment we are finalising our country report. Part of that work is the question of what we are going do with the stadia that were built so that communities can actually benefit. Those gains include the fact that those facilities must be utilised by different people in poor communities. As it is now, they cannot access them. There is the potential for these stadiums to become white elephants that are only being accessed by people who are actually well off, and so on.
Part of consolidating the gains is to work with local government and, at the same time, look at the possibility of ensuring that ordinary poor developmental sport clubs in different communities can access these facilities. But that is not the only issue. There is the question of social cohesion and nation-building programmes that we actually need to sustain after the World Cup, as part of consolidating the gains of the World Cup.
Infrastructure development is ongoing and ever expanding, even in areas where people did not have access to certain things, such as sporting facilities and so on. To date we are running a programme of delivering artificial pitches in the rural and far-flung areas of South Africa. We are developing pitches and more throughout South Africa as part of the 2010 legacy, working hand in hand with the departments of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Human Settlements.
In the near future, we are going to finalise the resolution around infrastructure grants at the local level, in terms of the roll-out plan of facilities. This is part and parcel of the legacy that we celebrate going forward, in terms of facility and infrastructure expansion at the local government level.