Thank you, Brian.
The long-term care strategy that we have is based on the modern environment. If you look at when these hospitals were constructed, from 1946 to 1955, there was really no sophisticated long-term capacity in any province in the country. There is now, and more and more veterans want to stay closer to home. So our long-term vision is to capitalize on the expertise, particularly psycho-geriatric expertise, that we have in these contracted facilities in Ste. Anne's but allow those people who can stay in the community—and the majority of people we have in long-term care are staying in the community, either at home or in institutions—the choice of where they go.
When the veteran numbers wind down to a point where maybe the contract facilities aren't necessary, at least the care will be available in the community. Eight out of ten, or four out of five, veterans who approach us for long-term care want to stay in the community. But it's excellent in the long term to have a psycho-geriatric resource like Ste. Anne's either as a hospital that we own or as one we contract with.