You knew there were three. I will try to remember.
I guess on one part of your question about the coming back to work and if that's making it harder, in my area the majority of the people I deal with are already out of the military. They're coming forward now, and I think a lot of it is as a result of word of mouth, as everybody has said here. The guys go out and they see results and they're getting help, and then their friends notice a change in them and they ask, “What's going on with you?”, and they say, “Well, you've got to give this person a call.”
I work with people in Thunder Bay, and I live out of Calgary just because I've had friends of those people.... I work out of the Veterans Affairs office. I can tell you one thing: in the office I work in, Veterans Affairs are really, really looking after their people. Every single time a soldier or a former soldier phones that 1-866 number, and they want to make an application or just ask questions about post-traumatic stress disorder or OSIs in general, they are automatically referred to the OSISS personnel at my site. I think that is part of the reason why I'm so busy.
I know the reservists on the base in Calgary. That's 41 Brigade, which I work with in Alberta. They just took on a new initiative, and I'm thinking it's called Operation Home Grizzly, but I'm not 100% sure. That's going to be a committee, and they're going to have one unit representative per reserve unit. So they'll be the liaison officer. And we'll be part of the committee to make sure these people don't fall through the cracks. That committee will be made up of Canadian Forces health services, the unit representatives, Veterans Affairs Canada, padres, operational stress injury clinics, family resource centre, and of course OSISS.
So the efforts are there, being done. From a Veterans Affairs perspective, I can tell you that I was 100% confident there's nobody falling through the cracks who are coming through.