I'll offer a comment, and, Ken, you can certainly amplify.
I just read the history of the Legion; it's called Branching Out, The Story of the Royal Canadian Legion. It's a remarkable organization. I've worked in Veterans Affairs for a long time, so I probably should have known this. It was there when veterans needed them after the First World War, after the Second World War, after Korea, and now in terms of reinvention, as it were--or being relevant to the modern veteran--it's been a very, very strong advocate for the new veterans charter and a strong advocate for changes to it as well. I can assure you of that. I'm hearing quite a bit about that. So anything the government can do to enable that organization to carry on, not only in making a contribution to veterans and their families but in making a contribution to their communities, would be laudable.
There are some natural limits because of their advocacy role, but we've directed some of our business to the Royal Canadian Legion, and we've been able to do it so that they maintain their arm's length from us. It's been a great service. With that as a precedent, I don't see why other things couldn't be directed in that area. Maybe they're going to get more involved in the job placement program too.
But sustaining them in all the communities they're now in is going to be a real challenge, given the diminishing number of their founding charter members. It's going to be a real challenge.