In the case of Kelowna, there are 3,500 clients managed there. Those are not case-managed clients. That's your general client group, and there are 88 case-managed veterans in the area that the office would take. Prince George has 1,200; 64 are case managed. Saskatoon has approximately 29. I can give you precise numbers but they would fluctuate a bit. However, 71 are case managed. In the case of Surrey, which we have not opened yet, it's a brand new office that's coming with 7,441 and about 200 are case managed. Brandon has 2,400 clients, and 123 are case managed. Thunder Bay has 1,692, and 57 are case managed. Windsor has 2,776 with 126 that are case managed. Sydney has 2,181 clients, and 145 are case managed. Charlottetown has 2,100, with 100 case managed. Corner Brook has 943 clients, and 118 are case managed.
We can't forget the north. The minister and the deputy spoke about the north. We have 300 clients identified in the north. Fifteen are case managed. We actually suspect this will go up a lot because the Rangers, who patrol the north on a yearly basis for Canada, for the armed forces, although they fall into different categories, when they are on patrol they are eligible for VAC benefits if they get injured. We don't have a lot of those people, so that's the outreach we're really doing for the Ranger groups. As an example, one of my DGs was up there in April, outside of Iqaluit somewhere, and they went into a very small village and there were three veterans. One of the elders said, “You should talk to this one here; he's having issues”, and this was not somebody anywhere on our radar. We think that number will go up, but at the moment those are the numbers.