The projections that are produced at our department use the national occupation classifications, so we don't use a specific set. We use what's used by others. We don't have our own. We use the standard that most people would use in Canada. The projections are done for 140 occupations. If we were to go beyond that, we would go to another level of granularity, bringing us to considering 500 occupations.
When we look at smaller occupations, at smaller regions, we often run into statistical difficulties because we don't have enough information. Going to the next level represents substantial difficulties for us in producing high-quality information. It limits our capacity to go down to other levels. That said, our staff is looking at ways to produce some of that information, but there are certainly some challenges because of the nature of the data that we get. There is only so far you can go in disaggregating that information.