Absolutely.
Those are survivors of war service veterans, those being folks who served during World War I or World War II.
I can't answer your question about how the number was calculated.
I'm aware of the background you're talking about and the suggestion that's been made by a number of sources to expand VIP eligibility into the area of survivors beyond where we are now.
I should point out something quite important to you. It is that the authority we have today to provide VIP to primary caregivers--and mostly it is the survivor of the veteran--is actually in the regulation, and it's in the regulation as a continuation of the benefits that are in place.
With the changes that Mr. Ferguson referred to over the last number of years, we have now provided VIP housekeeping and grounds maintenance to all survivors of veterans who were in receipt of VIP benefits at the time they died or at the time they went into a long-term care institution.
The pressure point now is to go beyond that. That means providing the same VIP benefits that are available to our primary clients, the veterans, to survivors as primary clients in and of their own right. That's the significance of this; it's not a continuation of benefits to go further down the road. That's the number--237,000. It's an estimate number. The cost of providing the housekeeping and the groundskeeping to those individuals is about $330 million.