That is correct. The minister talked about the benefits programs to veterans being quasi-statutory. What does quasi-statutory mean? It means that when a veteran qualifies for a benefit, I, as the head of the department, or the department itself, cannot say, sorry, we don't have the money for you. The money will be there. The government budget process, through supplementary estimates like the ones you have in front of you, is the mechanism for us to get that money.
We do forecast to the best of our knowledge with the best tools we have to assess how many veterans will need services and what cost that will entail for the budgetary process. But it's not an exact science. And whether the number of reassessments will be exactly what we forecast, or whether we will have exactly the number of veterans showing up for benefits that we forecast, we do need a mechanism to make adjustments. Through the supplementary estimates, that's the way we get the money.
The fundamental point is that the money is there, and we find a way through the government budgeting process, through the supplementary estimates, to get the money.