I'll answer it a little bit more completely.
They're considered clients in our database if they've passed through the process and are officially receiving support or benefits from us. If they aren't there, any time they come back to the department to get...we provide everybody with the basic support, even if they're not clients. In other words, we'll talk to them, we'll assess their needs, and if we have determined they're not clients and they can't get help from us, we will attempt to connect them with other agencies that may be able to help them. So in that sense we try to treat them as clients, even though they're not officially within the client list I've given you, which is the 230,000.