The business plan was built to take into account that we have a Parliament of 338 members and 105 senators, and the demands are growing. As I said, this year, the reason the amount is higher is to manage the transition, but also because we are relatively much busier than in the past years because of the Parliament of Canada Act.
The act now requires that the cost of any proposed measure be assessed. The act has been changed to use the word “shall” in English, which means we must do it. If a member of Parliament, a senator or a parliamentary committee asks us to do an analysis of the cost of a parliamentary measure, we must do so. Clearly, that's why we are going to increase our staff. Right now, we are aiming for 32 to 35 analysts, for a total of 42 people in our office. That's what it will look like in a year. We have 15 or 16 analysts right now. So we are going to double our staff and we think that, with the amount allocated, but also with this number of people, we will be able to meet the requirements of the act that tells us we have to.