Five minutes. I see.
I had the great privilege of touring the Veterans Affairs building in Kirkland Lake and meeting the staff. They do excellent work; they are dedicated. They do whatever they can there. They see themselves as advocates for the veterans.
What I'm interested in, though, is that the nature of the work is starting to change dramatically as we start to have a young generation of veterans, with very different issues from the ones the widows have, the pensions. We're seeing a greater need now to deal with the new kinds of cases, and that will put a strain on the department.
What allocation of resources do you have to ensure this transition from the period when we were looking at basically our World War II and Korean War veterans to now, where people are coming back from the field with--as we talked about--stress, other related injuries, and other needs?