I appreciate the question, because I'm also interested, understanding that the benefit is about getting above the measures that are out there. What does that really mean at the end of the day?
There's a big difference in the senior population, for example, between living in a house that you've owned for 40 years and still having to pay rent. I wish I could say here's the study and here's the information on it, but I don't have that. It's an issue that we're trying to get a better understanding of.
As we've already discussed, some of those elements are not federal elements at all and have significant cost implications for seniors. It's already been mentioned that accommodation is a fundamental issue. Drug costs can become a fundamental issue. Those are things that we need to better understand, and I think we're going to try to better understand them.