I will offer up two things that might be contributing. One is more gradual, and it has to do with technology changes. This might mean that disabilities now have less impact on day-to-day lives. Diabetes could be an example. That's a general trend. There are new technologies becoming available that make it easier, and since the disability tax credit is based on how much a disability is affecting your day-to-day life, that's one possibility. I'll put that in.
The second thing is that we are always, as the minister said, trying to work with the medical community and the disability community to make sure that we're making the forms simpler and that we're getting the information we need. We have communications with doctors, for example, where we're asking them to tell us why this person is eligible for the credit. They've asked us to make the letter a little simpler for them, because sometimes they have a difficult time forming a basis for that judgment, so we changed those.
Could something like that have changed it? That'll be something we'll have to look at, but I want to take a look at the actual numbers. At the end of the day, the question for us is whether it's being administered fairly and in accordance with the act. That will be how we—