In fact one of the advantages of the way the Department of Veterans Affairs works with this committee is that some of the ideas, as they came up around the table, were taken back into the organization and have subsequently been introduced, and are being introduced, as changes.
In fact, from the economic needs side of it, I found Veterans Affairs to be extremely open and receptive to these ideas. In fact, I would go as far as to say it's a fairly courageous thing to put this kind of a group together, because you're going to get criticized. Even if you accomplish a lot, there are always going to be other things left to accomplish. In the economic needs side, there are several of these major issues that would be a challenge, and they will be a challenge to implement.
For example, if we were to decide not to tax, as Dr. Neary's research indicated in the past, the 75% figure was used because it was a non-taxable benefit. We've kept it at 75% but made it a taxable benefit, so we've actually reduced it further. We don't escalate or have any kind of increase in the base. If you're a young private or young corporal when something happens, that's it. For the rest of your career, your entire pension time is based on that original salary.
We're suggesting strongly that this be pro-rated over the years, assuming that the average corporal would eventually become a sergeant, would eventually become a warrant officer, etc., and in some phenomenal cases, like the officer to my left, eventually a colonel. There is a significant increase that would come if we were to allow that baseline to keep moving forward as a normal career would. There's a variety of those that we have identified and fed back into the Department of Veterans Affairs, and they're in various stages of staffing.