I think that's an important point, because the statute is a statutory guarantee, and the funding for it is through quasi-statutory allotments the government provides. Of course, the department has budgets, but we are required by law to provide for the benefits the clients are eligible for as assessed under that statute. So there is no limitation applied to us. When a veteran is eligible, we have to use the appropriate approaches, of course, with government to secure the appropriate level of funding. But we are absolutely not limited when there is a statutory guarantee to provide those benefits. This is one of the real values of the program.
I should point out to you that there have been a lot of comments about the notion of cost-saving, and it is a theoretical notion at best, because the statute says that regardless of how many veterans there are or how seriously they may be injured in the future, they have that statutory guarantee that the support will be there into the future.