First and foremost, sir, I think the best answer I can give you is the response times in terms of access to mental health practitioners. I, as a military individual experiencing mental illness, can go into our Canadian Forces clinics across the country and get immediate care—immediate care. Typically, if it's deemed that I need a full psychiatric assessment, it takes three to four weeks for that to occur, compared to, on our civilian side, one year for the same psychiatric assessment. So to answer your question, it wasn't an issue of a lack of availability of clinical support to our members and to our families.
The number is 452: 452 mental health practitioners and support personnel, of which today we have filled 417, leaving 35. Ms. Rigg explained the process for expediting so that we can fill those 35 as quickly as possible. Because our service delivery we felt was meeting and is meeting the needs of the members of the Canadian armed forces, we, as I mentioned, need to do more, and in doing more, we are going to need more clinicians and support staff. That is what we're doing now—hiring those.