With regard to job creation, there would be thousands of jobs simply due to the research projects we support. Those are made up of dozens of scientists in each of the projects, and technicians, graduate students, post-docs, etc. The majority of the funding we spend actually goes into human resources.
In addition, we have at least 25 companies, I believe, that have spun out from Genome Canada. They're very small still, with few staff, so that may add an additional couple of hundred people.