Yes. We provide the advice, we provide the technical, and we provide the infrastructure.
If I could, I'd just like to explain the reason for that. If you look at various ombudsmen's offices, wherever they may be, they generally tend to be a small number of people. They're not huge organizations. And in today's world of somewhat complex staffing rules and high-tech computer-based infrastructure, these small organizations really cannot afford to have their own infrastructure. That's why the department provides it, in terms of efficiency. It is so the resources the ombudsman has--whether it is the Veterans Affairs ombudsman or any other ombudsman--can really be invested in doing the types of things they're intended to do.
If I may, while I will not respond to some of the questions you put on the table, I will take exception to one of the statements you made, which is that the department was not in favour of this.