A combination of measures is going to be required. Just to be very clear, over the next 24 months we are focused on stabilizing the backlog with the recent investments of over $200 million for the board over the next two years. It will allow us to ramp up—but only at the pace that we are able to ramp up, frankly—to develop a processing capacity to meet the intake. At that point, you are correct that the backlog, based on forecasts of 60,000 claims in a year—it may not be that many—will be around 100,000.
At that point the government will have options available to it, including, as has been done in the past, providing dedicated funding to reduce the backlog, because at that point the backlog is no longer growing. To reduce the backlog of 100,000, it is correct to say that based on how much it costs to process a claim, including both the refugee protection division and the appeal division, it's been calculated to be between some $200 million and $400 million, depending on various variables.