I was anticipating that kind of question, so we actually did put a table in our report. That's the big brick. It's table 44, where we actually compared the population numbers by department in March 2007 and at year-end 2008. When you run your eye down those percentages, you have to be very careful, because you have some big percentage increases.
It's on pages 154 and 155 in the English version.
You have some big percentage increases, but of course when you have a very small organization, it doesn't involve many people.
In a way, some of it is not really surprising in terms of where we've seen growth. I would just point to some departments. We've seen growth in places like the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, where there was 14% growth. That's on a fairly large base. That kind of growth was related directly to the crisis we had with passports; we had a real problem with getting people their passports in time, so you saw growth in that area.
In some of the other departments, such as the Department of Health, you had some growth, in that case 6%, which is above average.
I'm ignoring all of the little guys. One that's notable is the Office of Indian Residential Schools Resolution, where we had a 45% growth rate, but it was a new organization.
You will see some declines, but the details are there in the table.
There was growth in the Public Health Agency of Canada, and at Public Safety, where there was 15% growth—