I'm not sure you can comment on this, Mr. Hillier, but this was provided to me by the researcher. Going back to Mr. Shipley's comments, I don't think--to slightly disagree with you, perhaps--that we have to get it perfect. We'll adjust it if it's not perfect. The idea is to get it in. We'll do the best we can, but it may need to be adjusted.
They gave us the figures for the question we'd asked last week of the Department of Veterans Affairs--specifically, how many requests were there for the ombudsman's service? It averages only about 200 a year. We might be envisioning something much bigger than what we actually need.
We have to build something that serves the needs of the veterans. I don't know what I can say other than that. I had expected the number to be a lot higher, because we'd heard that there were 17,000 requests at the ombudsman's level for all of Australia. Their forces are roughly the same size as ours, but we may have more veterans. I'm not sure how heavy their involvement was in the Second World War.
So it may not be as big as we envisioned, but let's get it going.