There are two points to your question. New Zealand is in the process of making a transition. Up to the previous president of the RSA, all prior presidents were Second World War veterans. The last two were Vietnam War veterans. Even they say we need to be looking to the next generation of veterans to lead the organization, because the issues are more intense and complex, and they have to spend more time on the job.
New Zealand has RSA outposts in almost every town, and each RSA will have a welfare officer to whom the returned servicemen and women can go if they have issues about welfare. They will be about how they work in the home, those with respect to the War Pensions Act, and so on. I will help them with those.
So we're going to provide support, training, and other things to the welfare officers in the RSAs across New Zealand, in addition to the services we provide. They will see the people in their communities, know them, and have relationships with them that the state institutions, like Veterans' Affairs and others, won't have. They will be the best people to lead them to assistance.
We want to work with the RSA to make sure they have very good networks bringing the people in who need assistance, particularly with PTSD and so on. We want to help people and get them on side to help us help them.