Thank you for your presentation. Since I'm replacing a colleague, I took the time to read all the documentation before coming here.
Before being elected member, I was a social worker with seniors, in particular at a public home for seniors in Quebec. So I definitely feel concerned by Ms. Hinton's question and by the study you're going to do.
I think it's important to emphasize that the choice of living environment, whether you're a veteran or a senior who did not go to war, is a personal choice that should not be determined by a question of cost.
In Quebec, we've adopted a home care support policy that encourages seniors to stay at home because that's often people's first choice, but also because it was determined that that was the least costly option for our government.
I worked at a reception centre where there were veterans. There's one in Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue. It's not a very natural living environment, it's more an institutional living environment.
Quebec has evaluation grids — I'm going to use a little social worker jargon — that determine that, when someone requires more than four hours of care a day, it is hard to keep that person at home. So they have to consider a different living environment.
In Quebec, we've developed an alternative to public housing that's called intermediate resources. The government awards a contract to a non-profit organization, a worker's cooperative or a private business, to house people who require more or less one to four or four and a half hours of care a day.
Following your study, I encourage you to explore this avenue because you might encourage the introduction of what we in Quebec call intermediate alternative resources. That might enable veterans who leave their home to gain access to a less formal resource than those provided in the institutions. In Quebec, these people enjoy all the services of the CLSCs, the Centres locaux de services communautaires. They're found everywhere in Quebec, in 17 administrative regions.
I find that avenue interesting, and I hope your department won't just think about housing costs, but also about veterans' wish to choose their living environment.
Now I have a question to ask you. Do you systematically evaluate veterans' satisfaction with the services provided under your program? Do you consult them? Do you have a kind of communication that enables you, when you conduct your studies or reorient your services, to identify what really meets the needs of veterans?