Thanks, Deputy.
It really depends on the condition, of course, what the wait time might be for any individual case, and whether or not there are multiple conditions and which conditions. It might be that it's more complicated, or other.... There are a variety of times, but what I will say is that of course that length of wait time is obviously too long. That is why the number one most important issue for Veterans Affairs to be able to address is working through the wait times.
When you ask about what the time frame would be expected to be, when we talk about the additional resources that the deputy just mentioned and the addition of more than 300 resources coming on—we've already hired more than 300 of them—we do expect to make an additional 80,000 decisions over the course of this year and next, through to March 2022. There's a timeline whereby we expect to make enough decisions to get back down to a backlog—or those files that are beyond the 16 weeks of our service standard—of under 5,000.