They'd be entitled to university. It's almost $10,000 a year. I think it's $360, almost $400 a month, ongoing for 12 months a year. That, along with the other support costs we have, is almost $10,000 per child up until the age of 25. That's one benefit we're very proud of and one that I think is a little bit of a carry-over from World War II. I think Veterans Affairs offered that then as well, and it's been continued under the new charter.
One of the conditions to it, which I think most of us would appreciate, is that we're now going back into disabilities. If you are asking what happens if you come back and have a disability—what about that—the truth is that if you come back and you have a 100% disability, that benefit to your children would happen. We'd honour that commitment to your children in terms of education. That number kicks in, Ms. Gordon, at 48%. For example, children of a veteran who has a 5% disability wouldn't get it, but for those extreme cases where you could make the argument that it's hard for that veteran now to carry on with life—they have a 48% disability—then their children would receive that benefit. If it's 100%, they're going to receive the benefit. If it's 10%, the answer would be no.
That is something I think we're all pretty proud of, and it's something many jurisdictions don't do.