I guess the first one is the expansion of these benefits to the modern-day veteran. We've taken on, as our primary advocacy issue, access to long-term care. Gordon didn't mention it, but at the Perley Rideau, which has been converted to a provincial hospital, there is a waiting list for beds now for Second World War veterans, let alone modern-day veterans. Unless they take this to heart and create a priority system across the country with the provinces, then I'll be number 200 on the list, however much my requirements may be for a bed in long-term careānot tomorrow but probably in a few years.
The second one is the VIP program and its expansion to the modern-day veteran. Why should we be treated any differently from those who went before us? As we've already stated, in my own case, with these guys, we served in UN jobs. I climbed mountains in India and Pakistan for a year. I did two tours in Germany and exercises in north Norway, China, and the Middle East. All of that takes a toll that doesn't necessarily show up right away. I've got bad knees, bad hips, a bad back. I suppose those could all be birth defects, I don't know.
That's where we need to look, and those would be our first two recommendations. We're now in the process of looking at where we should go from there so that we just don't wander off in the wilderness.
We've given you two.