As I've said before, I believe the surgeon general's shop, because all medical officers reside in that entity, can do the adjudication of service. We don't have to send this to VAC.
I also understand, and I'm sure you will hear, that there are complex cases and there are operational stress injuries that manifest themselves many years down the road. I don't expect the surgeon general's shop to handle those. I believe there will always be a need for an adjudication cell at Veterans Affairs Canada to handle those types of cases. Those that are extremely complex will require multiple medical reviews or will involve an operational stress injury that manifests itself many years later.
We have about 1,500 members medically releasing a year. I think about 600 to 700 of those releases are attributable to service. I'm not talking about handling 60,000 cases a year or 11,000 cases a year. If we go after those medical releases attributable to service and all who are medically releasing, the maximum is 1,500.
When I say that, people say it's going to generate a lot of work. I'm not quite sure I understand that either, because we've been giving this member medical assistance and programs and help and aid all along the way. We've managed that piece of the career. Contrary to popular belief, when a soldier becomes ill or injured, the Canadian Armed Forces do good work. They pull out every stop. The chief of the defence staff has recently said, and he has said it multiple times, that he would like to return as many people to work as possible. In order to do that, there's a very rigorous program wrapped around these ill and injured soldiers.
That's my position. I think we have full control. I think we can clearly see what the end of the day looks like.