As the deputy minister indicated, we agree that our decisions and the processing of these applications need to be quicker, especially in the case of people who are terminally ill.
At the department, the 48-hour deadline is a guideline. Case monitoring and management was not as good as it should have been. As part of our service standards review, we are going to recommend setting a real standard, which will be public. The level of performance will be accessible to clients, directly, so that they can be reassured and assured that we are going to apply the standard when these decisions are made. We are reviewing the entire process.
In January, we launched a pilot project in Victoria. We are auditing and testing practically every imaginable approach, including receiving material, requests, internal procedures, case management, or dividing up tasks. Everything is on the table and being looked at. We want to make sure that we can implement this new service standard. Of course, we hope to be able to implement it as soon as possible.
So far, the pilot project is showing that we will achieve much higher levels of performance, as well as a quality and assurance of service that will make people see, through this process, that we are on their side.