No. When I speak about 60,000 person-hours to investigate those 1,500 complaints as a ballpark, that is just the initial 30-day investigation and returning it to the CRCC and the complainant. Should there be more required, that's not included.
If we are talking about only the status quo today, for 30 members of the RCMP, all in it's about $202,000 per member for training and everything—all that great stuff. You can do the math: 30 x $200,000 is around $6 million. That would be an estimate for the status quo, for just the RCMP.
When you add a completely new public safety agency into the complaints process, I don't think anyone really has an idea of what that is going to do to the PCRC in terms of volume through the next year. What volume are we going to see through the Canadian public? Is it going to be consistent with what it has been with the RCMP? How do you resource it appropriately?