Thank you for that.
This is a pretty specific thing. It's a situation I was not dealing with, but that was around just last week. We talked about access and making information available and about checklists for where you get service, and so on. One thing I would throw out as a suggestion and to get your comment on is the idea of a checklist at death for veterans—not for the veterans themselves, but for the veterans' spouses.
I was in a situation last week in which a close friend of mine had passed away from cancer, and his wife was dealing with it. She had three people assisting her, three fellow veterans. One was a former chief of the air force and the two others were very senior officers in the air force. They had a real challenge in piecing together all of the things that a widow in that situation, who is obviously under stress, needs to deal with in terms of all the benefits and everything that's there.
It would seem to me that Veterans Affairs Canada should have a one-stop checklist—we talk about one-stop shopping—with all the things you need to do or all the agencies you need to contact. Some of them aren't within DND. Some of them are within DND, but there's the Canada Pension Plan and a whole bunch of different things.
Has anybody contemplated a checklist upon the death of the veteran to help the survivor?