Well, yes.
Bill is talking about Major Paterson. He's in the regular social system in Nova Scotia right now. He's been denied by the veterans hospital because he is not a post-Korean War veteran. He does not have the right to a veterans long-term care facility. So he is now like any other person who has an illness that puts them into a long-term care facility. Usually, you see elderly people in these long-term care facilities, like our parents and so on. He is with all the rest of them, and he is on a waiting list, yes. The first place that came up was three hours away. He will stay there until they find another facility for him, but he may not get another facility near his home. He may be dead before that happens. It could take years. Actually, now that he's placed in a home, he goes back down to the bottom of the list. That's the provincial system. But since he's a veteran and he responds well to anything related to the military, even though he has dementia, we feel he deserves to be in a veterans bed somewhere in the province, preferably close to his home.