Thank you.
I got what I wanted when I asked the question about gaps, because one of the comments I picked up on is about the low percentage of veterans who are served or who come forward, which my colleague also commented on.
The number is very similar, I believe, here in Canada. We have huge difficulty reaching out to the veterans. We think it's as simple as maybe they could talk to their members of Parliament or their Congressman. We don't know who they are. And with the privacy laws that are in place, this is where we're failing them. We're failing to let them know that those services are out there. We're failing to let them know that parliamentarians like me are there to service them.
I don't know how to get around that, but if we look at all the things we do, if we could reach more people or get them to come forward.... I don't know the situation where you serve, and if politicians are allowed to have names of people coming back. There's something we're not doing right, up here, and based on the percentage of veterans who are being served, it may not be the best situation down there.
As the senior people who are looking after many of these people, we have to find a different way of doing this, so we look to you to help us, because we can't figure it out up here. And it's the same question that was asked before, but it's not about one specific issue, PTSD. How are we going to get the veterans to come to us?
I struggle with that, because we need them to come. We are people persons; that's how we get elected. We can recognize a lot of things, and we'll know where these people are. It's as simple as a letter we could send them once a month, but we're not allowed to know where the veterans are located.
We're charged with many things in government. We know many things the general public doesn't, and yet we cannot know where the people we're trying to serve are.
Do you have any suggestions? Obviously you suffer from the same problem yourselves.