It's a very multi-pronged question and it's interesting because I did spend my first four years in Borden, so I know Alliston, Angus, Barrie, the whole area, and I have a lot of pleasant memories of that area.
On transition, I think, we are learning more and more, as are our allies, about transition, and one thing that I've been speaking about a lot with my colleagues is the concept of transitions in the plural sense.
Borden is a training base, and many, many people come in from civilian society and there's that harsh transition into the military. They've just finished basic training. They're away from family and they're learning their skills, their trades. The first year, the first couple of years, we do have suicides, we have self-harm in our officer cadets, in our young soldiers who are starting off. There's the transition coming back from deployment. That first year after deployment is also a time of elevated risk of family difficulties, self-harm and mental illness. So that's why we have the screening, and the reintegration. We've changed the way people come home from deployment.
Then of course, yes, there's the transition out from the forces. It's a stressful time regardless. It's a difficult time regardless. You have to get provincial health cards again. You have to do all kinds of things that you haven't done before, such as find a family doctor, which is also stressful. Then if you add mental illness to that on medical release, you've sort of increased it even further.
In terms of the health care provided in local hospitals, I think it's Stevenson Memorial, if I remember correctly?