Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to all the witnesses.
It's been a very emotional thing listening to your testimony. I do have a number of questions. I want to preface them with some specific experience of mine as an MP with a veterans hospital in my riding. Parkwood is in my riding.
I meet modern-day vets all the time. The reason I meet them is that they've been denied long-term care. They've been denied support at that veterans hospital.
One in particular—a colonel, a Cold War pilot, one of those people who flew along the Iron Curtain day after day—would have been 80 or 81. He required surgery for his back because of what the surgeon said was a service-related injury. He ended up in a wheelchair. He couldn't go home because there was no facility at home for him. There was no long-term care bed in a provincial nursing home. He was told, “Sorry, you have to leave”.
So we fought to allow him to stay at Parkwood, to get a long-term care bed. With a lot of persistence and a lot of good people fighting for him, he was finally given that bed at a cost. He had to pay for the bed, and Veterans Affairs had the audacity to say, “Don't worry, Neil, you're not taking up a bed of a veteran. You're not forcing a veteran from a bed here at Parkwood.”
My concern is that Neil and so many others—and perhaps your spouse, Mr. MacEachern—are not receiving the long-term care they need, whether it's emotional care or physical care, and that's simply wrong. Modern-day veterans should indeed have that long-term care. I've taken this up with the minister, and I've consistently heard the same response, as recently as last night during a debate, that we have provincial health care services and that they should be looking after our veterans.
Can you comment? Do you believe it is the purview of the province to look after our modern-day veterans?