One of the things that really bothered me when I attended hearings at the VRAB is that there are two adjudicators. One of the adjudicators does 98% of the work and the other adjudicator does nothing, so I would suggest that if you appointed a member of the military to the VRAB and you had a single adjudicator—as in a great many adjudications across Canada—you would see the judgments markedly different.
Right now you have to convince two people that what you're asking for is reasonable, bearing in mind that only one has asked all the questions. Then they go back and make a telephone call to a doctor, a psychiatrist, or whomever, and ask, "This is what I heard today; can you help me out?"
We don't have the opportunity to do that, but if you had one adjudicator, it would be that much better, and if that adjudicator had a military background—or a law background, or a police background—you would see the judgments change overnight.