Mr. Gaudet, I've been there twice, and really what takes most of the time is the discussion with VRAB. Most of it is introductory, and then they explain the building and why it's there. Then you go into the casework files on people from across the country who are calling in. They show you how they process them and how they go from this desk to that desk. That takes about two or three hours. What takes most of the time is the Veterans Review and Appeal Board. A lot of you will have questions about what happens when someone is denied, and how that is judged based on someone's experience or whatever. That usually takes up a lot of time, because they get quite defensive about that.
That leads me back to my statement earlier. I know I'm bootlegging here, but I had asked the deputy minister a question before—and I was hoping she would have responded to us by now—on the number of people in VRAB who have a medical or military background. We haven't received that information yet. Is it possible to remind her that we asked her that question? Hopefully we can get that information from her.