Yes, Mr. Chairman.
We opened a dedicated call line on January 26, and between then and the end of the day on February 14, we had 10,200-odd calls to that line on a variety of issues. Of those, 713 related to the loss of citizenship. Of that number, we were able to confirm citizenship for 670, and 43 were referred to Sydney for further review.
I think we understand that 450 is not a magic number. That's what we have in the system now. But when we find that we've had 10,000 calls, and only 43 merited further review, we have some difficulty coping with the idea that there are tens and tens of thousands.
I go back to the earlier point I made, which is that if anybody knows of a difficult case, they should register with the department. What we're dealing with now are those that have been registered, and every case that is a significant anomaly has been assigned to particular program officers. And I know that in many cases there have been many telephone exchanges with them. We're dealing with the cases, as the minister said, on an ongoing basis.