Yes. There was a problem with the younger veterans as well when we were looking at the changes that led to the new Veterans Charter, that the disability pension became the gateway to getting into related health services that are required relative to the injuries that may have been sustained in service to Canada.
Rather than having to come forward to the department and proving that you had been injured in some way, and linking that back 50 years to whatever happened to you at that time, the concept would be that if you're an older, frail veteran who needs support, we would find a way to place you on a continuum of need. In other words, if your needs were low, services would be provided in accordance with those needs. But if they were higher, you would get them based on the higher need that you now face. That's the basic concept that has been recommended by the Gerontological Advisory Council, and we're giving it a serious look.
The other aspect is that rather than constraining our decision-makers on the front line with complex eligibility rules, that would be the simple rule. They would need to have the judgment to be able to figure out what the right kinds of services are, but it would be a major breakthrough in terms of transforming the way we do our business.