The administrative cost still has to be established. The board of governors will bring forward a corporate plan that they will present to Treasury Board. Treasury Board will then have to make a judgment about whether or not that's acceptable.
I guess what I would emphasize is that some of the functions that the new board currently undertake are ones that already exist within the EI Commission. So in some cases it would simply be a transfer of responsibilities. It should be less cost on the EI Commission side and within the department, and more assumed by the board of governors.
The other part of it is that they'll be doing things that we don't currently do, like invest funds and get a return, which obviously has a big benefit, and I would think would be worth any additional expenditure.