From 1991 to 1993, I commanded the Lake Superior Scottish Regiment in Thunder Bay, and I had the misfortune of having to receive the first reservist injured overseas on an operational tour back into my unit. I must tell you that at that time the system to deal with reservists injured overseas was abysmal.
The difference between now and then is stark. We have made huge gains in the area of care for our reservists. As General O'Brien has alluded to, reservists injured overseas are treated the same way as a regular force soldier. We look after them until they are prepared to go back to what they were doing before they went overseas.
I have read the report. I've read the 12 recommendations made by the ombudsman. I've read the Auditor General's report as well. I must tell you that some of the recommendations that have been made by the ombudsman are already being actioned by the military. The chief of the military personnel is the individual who deals with this area. They are already working towards putting in place policies or changes to address the concerns raised by the ombudsman in her report on reserve care.
Is it 100%? No. Are we making headway? Yes. Is it better than it was? Yes. Are we going to get better? Yes. Am I, in my position, comfortable that we are doing everything we can to look after the reservists? Yes. Are there reservists who fall through the cracks? Yes. When we find out about them, do we put in place steps to deal with them? The answer to that is yes as well.
However, there are those, both in the regular force and the reserves, who, when they get back from wherever they were, walk away from the military and disappear. Those we have trouble dealing with. And three, four, five, ten years down the line, this individual may resurface with an issue. In my experience, when those individuals have resurfaced and we've been made aware of them, we've taken steps to deal with them and have linked them up with the authorities responsible for looking after them. In most cases that is Veterans Affairs.
So it is dramatically better than it was, and it is getting better every day. There are still, as I said, some challenges, but we're dealing with them.