My bottom-line thinking is that a veteran is a veteran is a veteran. All veterans should be treated equally, whether they served overseas or whether they did not. Their spouses, as you know, are the best friends the government has in looking after them. The best thing to do is to keep them in their own home, if possible, to allow them to die in their own home, if that's their choice. But in the case where they need that institutional care, we shouldn't have to be putting them on lists.
I know at Camp Hill, for example, there's a three-step thing that you have to be able to meet before you can get in there. It is quite frustrating for a person who's 89 years old and doesn't understand the complexities of the bureaucracy.
Perhaps I can just leave this with you. Perhaps you can take it back to the department to look at the future eligibility of our modern-day veterans who are now in their seventies. They're going to come up the ladder and they're going to be requesting this type of care. We're going to need to work on it fairly quickly.