I'm sorry; for the record, I didn't put forward those 299 recommendations. Those are a combination of all the recommendations from both the special needs advisory group and the new Veterans Charter advisory group. Of those, about 200 are non-overlapping recommendations, so they're highly unique. The remaining ones partially overlap or overlap fully. It's safe to say that in total there are probably about 250 different recommendations in the reports.
Have they been implemented? That's an excellent question. No, they haven't, and I'd like to speak quickly about the reason I think they haven't. It's because these recommendations, first of all, are going to the very individuals, Darragh Mogan and Ken Miller, who brief Parliament and tell everyone that the charter is a wonderful piece of legislation and only needs tweaking. Well, making 250 recommendations is not tweaking. This is a disaster. Any legislation, after five years, that requires 250 recommendations from only two advisory groups, plus my 38 recommendations, needs a complete overhaul.
In addition to that, when the committee makes recommendations, I would hope it's more or less an order instead of a recommendation, because I think it's ethically unjust to ask bureaucrats in Veterans Affairs to implement recommendations when they are more loyal to Treasury Board processes than they are to actually fulfilling their mandate to take care of veterans. It's understandable that way, but if you order them to do it--if the PMO orders them to do it--then there's no excuse. They have to implement them, and we don't put them in the middle and squeeze them between Treasury Board and what you are asking them to do.