Yes. Initially, the diagnosis comes from a treating doctor who was assigned to you in one of the clinics across Canada. That person follows you anywhere from six months to a year and decides that you should be compensated or treated—based on an assessment of 50%, 60%, 70% or more. Then the file goes to Charlottetown, and you get a negative decision back. I can tell you that, out of the 2,000 veterans in my group, nearly half have gotten such a response. And I have not even asked all of them. Regardless, it is a huge problem.
I hear about it every day. I am always talking to veterans. I spend day and night with them. I probably sleep only about a half-hour a day. My group is very active. We are everywhere. This year, I helped people who were planning to take their lives. I picked them up and kept them alive. I brought them to opening ceremonies, for example, a game that the Montreal Alouettes played at the Bell Centre in Montreal. They were there representing veterans. These people had never received any kind of recognition, and they were ill. If we had never done those things, they might not have lived to see this Christmas.