I agree with that. I'll just say on the information systems, which Fiona has alluded to, that they are all paper-based systems. There can be veterans walking down the street who walk into an office and say, “I'm a veteran”, and nobody in the office will have a list of them. You have to go back to Defence, and say, I have Rick Barker here, who claims he's a veteran. Is this true? That sends them off to scurry through the records, to wade through the papers and blow dust off them, and finally they get some dusty file and say, well, yes, he is because he did such-and-such; ah well, we'll then go and do other things for him.
Our systems have been very poor. What we're hoping to do is connect them up and have a complete list of them and know where our veterans are. Now, a veteran could have passed away and their funeral been treated as a civilian one, and we wouldn't know the veteran has gone because we're not connected to the information databases. We don't know. Someone could have gone overseas. We don't know that either. But what we're hoping to do is to get much better information.
One of the keys to this is the veterans card that we have produced now in New Zealand, a little card with a red poppy on it—it's unmistakeable. At the moment, it doesn't attract a lot of value in itself, but it eventually will. It's similar to a card we're giving to our superannuitants over the age of 65. Theirs has a lot on it. Anyway, it gives them access to some services. It will grow, because they have the superannuitants' card.
The veterans card is highly sought after, because there are some firms that will give discounts to superannuitants. People turn up with a veterans card, pull it out and ask, “Do you give discounts to veterans?” The person will see the poppy on it, and even though the firm probably doesn't give discounts, for a veteran, they'll say, “Okay, mate, we do.” So the veterans are finding these cards highly desirable, because even where there's no official discount rate, the firms are giving them one.
It reflects a change in values in New Zealand, where veterans are being accorded more respect today than they were 20 years ago—and I would say more respect in various sorts of ways, for a range of reasons.
One is that in New Zealand we were taught at school about the kings and queens of England. I never found any use for that piece of information in my life here, but anyway, I know a lot about it. But I was taught almost nothing about New Zealand history. What we're doing in schools now is we're teaching New Zealand children about New Zealand history—and of course you can't teach New Zealand history without talking about Gallipoli, about the Western Front, about World War II, about Korea and Vietnam, and so on, and who the veterans are. And schools are teaching people about ANZAC Day, which is our day of commemoration, and about what the poppy means. So the kids are seeing in their parents and their grandparents values they never saw before, and there's more respect. So there's a change in dynamic. There are other things, too, which I am sure you are well aware of.
So veterans in New Zealand are being accorded higher status and more respect and more regard. This is going to have a follow-on effect, in my view, for generations. I am sure the same is happening in Canada, as it is in other countries. I think this is all for the good. Instead of it being just something a person did—which is what the generation from World War II said, “Oh, I just did my job and that was the end of it, so don't give me anything else”—people are now saying, “No, you're a veteran; you are a special person.”
I think we're going to have changes as a consequence of that. I don't know where this is going to go, but it is going to go somewhere really good.